Why the Right Went Wrong: Conservatism--From Goldwater to the Tea Party and Beyond

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Simon and Schuster, Jan 19, 2016 - History - 532 pages
“Dionne's expertise is evident in this finely crafted and convincing work.” —The Los Angeles Times

From one of our most engaging political reporters and the author of Why Americans Hate Politics; the story of conservatism from the Goldwater 1960s to the present day Tea Party that has resulted in broken promises and an ideological purity that drives moderate Republicans away.

Why the Right Went Wrong offers a historical view of the right since the 1960s. Its core contention is that American conservatism and the Republican Party took a wrong turn when they adopted Barry Goldwater’s worldview during and after the 1964 campaign. The radicalism of today’s conservatism is not the product of the Tea Party, Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne writes. The Tea Partiers are the true heirs to Goldwater ideology. The purity movement did more than drive moderates out of the Republican Party—it beat back alternative definitions of conservatism.

Since 1968, no conservative administration—not Nixon not Reagan not two Bushes—could live up to the rhetoric rooted in the Goldwater movement that began to reshape American politics fifty years ago. The collapse of the Nixon presidency led to the rise of Ronald Reagan, the defeat of George H.W. Bush, to Newt Gingrich’s revolution. Bush initially undertook a partial modernization, preaching “compassionate conservatism” and a “Fourth Way” to Clinton’s “Third Way.” Conservatives quickly defined him as an advocate of “big government” and not conservative enough on spending, immigration, education, and Medicare. A return to the true faith was the only prescription on order. The result was the Tea Party, which Dionne says, was as much a reaction to Bush as to Obama.

The state of the Republican party, controlled by the strictest base, is diminished, Dionne writes. It has become white and older in a country that is no longer that. It needs to come back to life for its own health and that of the country’s, and in Why the Right Went Wrong, he explains how.
 

Contents

WHAT HAPPENED TO CONSERVATISM?
1
THE AMBIGUOUS HERO
27
FROM RADICALISM TO GOVERNING
66
THE END OF THE REAGAN MAJORITY
94
THE GINGRICH REVOLUTION AND CONSERVATISMS SECOND CHANCE
124
PUT ON A COMPASSIONATE FACE
160
THE NEW NEW OLD RIGHT
236
DREAMS OF CELESTIAL CHOIRS
261
THE TEA PARTY OVERREACHES AND REPUBLICANS WAGE CLASS WAR
323
SAYING YES AND NO TO OBAMA
365
THE FEVER THAT WOULDNT BREAK
385
REFORMING CONSERVATISM OR TRUMPING IT
415
UP FROM GOLDWATERISM
443
Acknowledgments
469
A Brief Bibliographic Essay
503
Copyright

THE LOGIC OF OBSTRUCTION
291

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About the author (2016)

E.J. Dionne, Jr., is a bestselling author, a syndicated columnist who appears twice weekly in The Washington Post and nearly a hundred other newspapers, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, and a professor at Georgetown University. His Why Americans Hate Politics won a Los Angeles Times Book Prize and was a nominee for the National Book Award. He is a regular commentator on National Public Radio and on other radio and television programs. He lives in Washington, DC, with his wife, Mary Boyle, and their three children.

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