John William McCormack: A Political Biography
Autor Garrison Nelsonen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 ian 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350143234
ISBN-10: 1350143235
Pagini: 928
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 56 mm
Greutate: 1.27 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350143235
Pagini: 928
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 56 mm
Greutate: 1.27 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Details previously unknown aspects of the JFK presidency and the peripheral political cabal, of particular interest to the avid educated readership who follow JFK
Notă biografică
Garrison Nelson is the Elliott A. Brown Professor of Law, Politics, and Political Behavior at the University of Vermont, USA. He is the author of more than 150 articles and professional papers on national politics focusing on the US Congress and elections in Vermont. He is an editor of the seven-volume Committees in the U.S. Congress, 1789-2010 (1993-2010) and the co-author of the Austin-Boston Connection: Five Decades of House Democratic Leadership, 1937-1989 (2009).
Cuprins
1 November 27, 1963: The Troubling Public Introduction 2 Irish Emigration and the Cauldron of Yankee Boston3 The Reinvention of John McCormack4 The Ascent: Yankee Mentors, Irish Gatekeepers, and Harriet 5 From Beacon Hill to Capitol Hill6 The 1928-33 Game Change7 The New Deal and a National Stage8 The Problematic Landslide: Court-Packing and Purges9 FDR's Third Term, the Austin-Boston Connection, and the Brink of War 10 War Transforms the Nation11 FDR's Death and the Politics of Post-war America12 The Unhealed Early Wounds: McCormack and Kennedy in the House13 A Republican Congress, a Vice Presidential Bid and the Four-Way Election of 194814 The Lost Peace, Korea and Anti-Communism15 Rabbi John Rescues Kennedy and a Transformed Delegation16 Ike's Presidency, John's Partial Eclipse and the Anti-Communism Crusade Fizzles17 Political Positioning, 1956-6018 Transitions, 1960-6119 The Tenuous Partnership, 196220 The Fateful Year of 196321 A Legislative Legacy Built Upon a Tragedy 22 The Unraveling, 1967-6823 It's Time, Mr. Speaker Epilogue
Recenzii
Garrison Nelson's "John William McCormack'' is a brilliant portrait not only of Boston's Forgotten Man but also of the place that spawned him (the Irish enclaves of Boston) and of the era he occupied (from the New Deal to the Great Society). It shimmers with gems of historical insight . and with breathtaking mastery of the local landscape, political and physical.
In summarizing McCormack's career, Mr. Nelson faults what veteran political correspondent Warren Weaver called "the dead hand of seniority" that placed him in the speaker's chair too late. "Speaker John McCormack was a classic example of a good man that the House wore out before it gave him power," wrote Weaver. At the same time, Mr. Nelson is generous enough to allow McCormack the last word. "If I were given a choice," observed Rabbi John, "I would rather be known as a good man than a great man." Never sacrificing his intellectual integrity, Garrison Nelson has seen to it that McCormack's wish is granted.
[An] intriguing overview of 20th-century America. Looking for tidbits about the lives and times of Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, Adlai Stevenson, Sam Rayburn, J. Edgar Hoover, Joe McCarthy, Jack Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon and more? This is the place.
This labor of love is not only an excellent contribution to our understanding of the role of individual leaders in the political process, it is also a fitting tribute to the contribution of a true scholar to the discipline of political science.
This massive tome (910 pages) provides the first biography of former House Speaker John McCormack. Through McCormack's long 42-year political career, the reader is introduced to the major political players and issues of the day. The book gives a feel for the handling of key issues between 1928 and 1971, such as World War II, Social Security, Vietnam, civil rights, and Medicare . Carefully researched, cited, and written, the book provides a behind-the-scenes view of how politics works. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students through faculty.
This is the definitive biography of John McCormack, a key figure in U.S. national politics from the 1930s through the 1960s. The book is deeply sourced, full of interesting material, and written in lively, engaging fashion. It addresses congressional politics, Congress-presidency relations, and electoral politics, not to mention the dynastic political life of the state of Massachusetts.
Over the course of a long and notable congressional career, John W. McCormack was present and influential well before his nine significant years as Speaker. Written with texture and imagination, this wonderful biography of one of the 20th century's most important political figures by a leading student of Congress deftly captures McCormack's personality, talents, and political capacity with depth and incisiveness.
I picked up this book expecting to find the best work ever written about Speaker John McCormack, yet Garrison Nelson has done so much more. This is a masterpiece among political biographies, as Nelson deftly handles a tremendous range of characters and national challenges.
Garrison Nelson's intention in this book about John McCormack was to make sure we did not forget John and in this he has admirably succeeded. His portrayal of McCormack is sensitive to the man - especially appealing is his modesty, as he did not want to be the Speaker - and to the difficulties of keeping a liberal northern Democratic and conservative southern Democratic party together in troubling times. His chapter on the Boston-Austin connection is especially enlightening about how the Democratic party was kept together. However, for me the best part of the book is that it vividly brings back a House of Representatives where compromise, cross party friendships, and a certain level of decorum ruled - a stark contrast to today's House of Representatives. Younger scholars need to read this book to see how things were, and older ones will want to remember the way things were.
The most important powerbroker you have never heard of finally comes back to life in this, savvy, meticulously researched, and fascinating biography. John William McCormack served in the House of Representatives from 1928 to 1971. He left a powerful mark on the Civil Rights Act, Medicare, Medicaid, World War II, the Vietnam War, and the list goes on. In this much-anticipated work, Garrison Nelson captures the great politician, a bygone political era, and the ways America used to work. Highly recommended for both scholars and citizens.
In summarizing McCormack's career, Mr. Nelson faults what veteran political correspondent Warren Weaver called "the dead hand of seniority" that placed him in the speaker's chair too late. "Speaker John McCormack was a classic example of a good man that the House wore out before it gave him power," wrote Weaver. At the same time, Mr. Nelson is generous enough to allow McCormack the last word. "If I were given a choice," observed Rabbi John, "I would rather be known as a good man than a great man." Never sacrificing his intellectual integrity, Garrison Nelson has seen to it that McCormack's wish is granted.
[An] intriguing overview of 20th-century America. Looking for tidbits about the lives and times of Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, Adlai Stevenson, Sam Rayburn, J. Edgar Hoover, Joe McCarthy, Jack Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon and more? This is the place.
This labor of love is not only an excellent contribution to our understanding of the role of individual leaders in the political process, it is also a fitting tribute to the contribution of a true scholar to the discipline of political science.
This massive tome (910 pages) provides the first biography of former House Speaker John McCormack. Through McCormack's long 42-year political career, the reader is introduced to the major political players and issues of the day. The book gives a feel for the handling of key issues between 1928 and 1971, such as World War II, Social Security, Vietnam, civil rights, and Medicare . Carefully researched, cited, and written, the book provides a behind-the-scenes view of how politics works. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students through faculty.
This is the definitive biography of John McCormack, a key figure in U.S. national politics from the 1930s through the 1960s. The book is deeply sourced, full of interesting material, and written in lively, engaging fashion. It addresses congressional politics, Congress-presidency relations, and electoral politics, not to mention the dynastic political life of the state of Massachusetts.
Over the course of a long and notable congressional career, John W. McCormack was present and influential well before his nine significant years as Speaker. Written with texture and imagination, this wonderful biography of one of the 20th century's most important political figures by a leading student of Congress deftly captures McCormack's personality, talents, and political capacity with depth and incisiveness.
I picked up this book expecting to find the best work ever written about Speaker John McCormack, yet Garrison Nelson has done so much more. This is a masterpiece among political biographies, as Nelson deftly handles a tremendous range of characters and national challenges.
Garrison Nelson's intention in this book about John McCormack was to make sure we did not forget John and in this he has admirably succeeded. His portrayal of McCormack is sensitive to the man - especially appealing is his modesty, as he did not want to be the Speaker - and to the difficulties of keeping a liberal northern Democratic and conservative southern Democratic party together in troubling times. His chapter on the Boston-Austin connection is especially enlightening about how the Democratic party was kept together. However, for me the best part of the book is that it vividly brings back a House of Representatives where compromise, cross party friendships, and a certain level of decorum ruled - a stark contrast to today's House of Representatives. Younger scholars need to read this book to see how things were, and older ones will want to remember the way things were.
The most important powerbroker you have never heard of finally comes back to life in this, savvy, meticulously researched, and fascinating biography. John William McCormack served in the House of Representatives from 1928 to 1971. He left a powerful mark on the Civil Rights Act, Medicare, Medicaid, World War II, the Vietnam War, and the list goes on. In this much-anticipated work, Garrison Nelson captures the great politician, a bygone political era, and the ways America used to work. Highly recommended for both scholars and citizens.