Typically a maligned figure in American political history, former vice president Spiro T. Agnew is often overlooked. Although he is largely remembered for his alliterative speeches, attacks on the media and East Coast intellectuals, and his resignation from office in 1973 in the wake of tax evasion charges, Agnew had a significant impact on the modern Republican Party that is underappreciated. It is impossible, in fact, to understand the current internal struggles of the Republican Party without understanding this populist "everyman" and prototypical middle-class striver who was one of the first proponents of what would become the ideology of Donald Trump’s GOP. Republican Populist examines Agnew’s efforts to make the Republican Party representative of the "silent majority." Under the tutelage of a group of talented speechwriters assigned to Agnew by President Richard Nixon including Pat Buchanan and William Safire, Agnew crafted the populist-tinged, anti-establishment rhetoric that helped turn the Republican Party into a powerful national electoral force that has come to define American politics into the current era. A fascinating political portrait of Agnew from his pre–vice presidential career through his scandal-driven fall from office and beyond, this book is a revelatory examination of Agnew’s role as one of the founding fathers of the modern Republican Party and of the link between Agnew’s "people’s party" and the fraught party of populists and businessmen today.
In finding this sharp distinction between Populism and the People's party, Mr. Argersinger portrays Populism not as a success but as a tragic failure, betrayed from within by politicians who followed political dictates rather than Populist ...
The Populist Movement in this book is defined as the Farmers' Alliance and the People's Party, as well as the Agricultural Wheel and Knights of Labor in the 1880s and 1890s.
New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1990. Poulantzas, Nicos. Political Power and Social Classes. London: Verso, 1968. Prather, H. L. Resurgent Politics and Educational Progressivism in the New South: North Carolina, 1890–1913.
The Party of the People demonstrates this data. Ruffini was as wrong as every pollster in 2016 and spent the intervening years figuring out why and developing better methods of analyzing voters in the digital age.
Donald Warren, Radio Priest: Charles Coughlin, the Father of Hate Radio (New York, 1996). Written after the Oklahoma City bombing, Warren's book ... Charles E. Coughlin, Am I an Anti- Semite? 9 Addresses on Various “Isms,” Answering ...
The book carefully elaborates the substance of each movement and analyses the social, political and economic forces driving them. It assesses their staying power and prospects in the 2020 presidential election.
Undertaken with the objective of testing recent controversial interpretations of the Populist movement, this book, according to one reader, “far surpasses” studies of Populism in other states “done long ago and innocent of modern ...
Samuel L. Webb presents new evidence that, contrary to popular belief, voters in at least one Deep South state did not flee en masse from the Republican party after Reconstruction.
The book will transform our understanding of how we ended up in our current state of extreme polarization and what we can do to fix it.
19 (2018): E4330– E4339; Will Wilkinson, The Density Divide: Urbanization, Polarization, and Populist Backlash (Washington, DC: Niskanen Center, 2019); David Autor, David Dorn, Gordon Hanson, and Kaveh Majlesi, “A Note on the Effect of ...