The uses and misuses of politics : Karl Rove and the Bush presidency /

"In 2001, a newly-elected Republican president went to Washington, hoping not just to serve out eight years in the White House but to change the governing philosophy of his party and to launch a new era of Republican electoral majorities. He failed. This book is the first detailed analysis of t...

Cur síos iomlán

Sonraí bibleagrafaíochta
Príomhchruthaitheoir: Mayer, William G., 1956- (Údar)
Formáid: Licensed eBooks
Teanga:Béarla
Foilsithe / Cruthaithe: Lawrence, Kansas : University Press of Kansas, [2021]
Rochtain ar líne:https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv1m0kghj
Cur síos
Achoimre:"In 2001, a newly-elected Republican president went to Washington, hoping not just to serve out eight years in the White House but to change the governing philosophy of his party and to launch a new era of Republican electoral majorities. He failed. This book is the first detailed analysis of the interaction between politics and policy in the Bush 43 presidency: about what he hoped to accomplish politically and how and why he failed. The central characters in this story are Bush himself and Karl Rove, Bush's chief political advisor, perhaps the most powerful political consultant in American history. Rove's ambition was to create the next realignment: to usher in an extended era of Republican electoral dominance. By late 2008, as the Bush presidency entered its final months, there was talk of realignment, but now it was the Democratic Party that controlled the presidency and both houses of Congress and was widely thought to be putting together a new majority coalition. This book explains what went wrong and how the political missteps and policy failures of Bush's advisor hold important lessons for future American presidents"--
Cur síos fisiciúil:1 online resource (x, 408 pages) : illustrations
Leabharliosta:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780700630547
0700630546
9780700630530
0700630538