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Hardcover Whose Broad Stripes and Bright Stars?: The Trivial Pursuit of the Presidency, 1988 Book

ISBN: 0446514241

ISBN13: 9780446514248

Whose Broad Stripes and Bright Stars?: The Trivial Pursuit of the Presidency, 1988

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Finally in paperback, here is the acclaimed bestseller hailed a fascinating tour de force of campaign reporting that should be one of the most widely read accounts of the 1988 race for the White House... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Solid yet Cynical Narrative

This book recreates the 1988 U.S. Presidential campaign (Bush vs. Dukakis) and its tawdry theater of sound bites, attack ads and half-truths. The authors show how Vice President George Bush Sr. won the Republican nomination by employing Lee Atwater's "South Carolina" strategy while dodging questions on Iran-Contra. Readers see how governor Michael Dukakis got the Democratic nod by getting credit for Massachusetts' strong economy and by winning the key primary in next door New Hampshire. We then see how Bush kept the advantage (despite picking Dan Quayle) with a crafty campaign that wrapped himself in the flag while attacking Dukakis as a less patriotic, soft-on-crime liberal. Dukakis' tepid response to these smears didn't cut it; nor did his Harvard persona or his finessing rather than flatly rejecting Jesse Jackson's pushy demand to be his running mate. I felt the authors barely touched another big factor; in a year of peaceful prosperity the party holding the White House (GOP) usually wins. On Election Day the voters said Bush by 54-46%. Liberal Columnists Jack Germond and Jules Whitcover have written several very good books on Presidential campaigns. Here they blend inside information with cynicism for sleazy campaign tactics and consultants like Roger Ailes (i.e., Willie Horton prison ads). The authors also look at also-rans like Lloyd Bentsen, Bob Dole, Pat Robertson, and others that played a major role in the campaign.

Colorful, But....

This is actually my favorite in the series of political books by Germond/Witcover (henceforth, G/W). I will praise it and then criticize it. It is worthy of praise for its excellent coverage of the immolation of Gary Hart and Joe Biden. It also does an outstanding job giving the history of Republican and Democratic parties in elections since 1960. The weakness comes from the obvious liberal bias that Germond has. They get angry with George Bush and the campaign he ran - although when they get back around to covering the 1992 election, they don't mention the dirt that Bill Clinton threw without any network complaints. (Update 2005: read Germond's new book and it becomes clear he HATES the Bush family). They book also demonstrates that the liberal elite just don't get it. In the final analysis, there's a complaint about the GOP hanging Vietnam around the necks of Democrats as being "unpatriotic," and imply Bush merely continued that. But Bush actually succeeded in playing the kind of superficial game that Democrats usually play at the polls - and their only anger is because he won. (Update: this last is ironic given the fact that Bush got pummeled on the National Guard issue as 'unpatriotic' but Kerry got drilled for exaggerating his own service). For example, it is common for the Democratic Party to say that the GOP will "cut" Social Security. I have debates on tape going back to 1960, and this argument has been made by every Democrat since 1976 (at least). But they know full well this is mere demagoguery. In fact, G/W do not bring out enough the fact that Dukakis was demagoguing that very issue - or the fact that he said he was a "card carrying member of the ACLU" in the primary but considered it "negative campaigning" when Bush hung the ACLU around his neck. The only problem the journalists have is NOT with the superficiality of elections, but the fact their chosen guy got beat. However, if one looks past the usual liberal jargon, it does read very well. They also have an excellent chapter on the Michigan caucus (GOP side) that Pat Robertson exploited. Their hatred for Robertson is evident in the book, too

Great Critical Analysis of a Tragic Campaign

Seasoned Washington professionals Jack Germond and Jules Witcover take the proper critical approach to a presidential campaign that in many ways represented a tragic slap in the face of democracy. Voters were so turned off that participation plummeted to 49%. This was the campaign where Willie Horton and the Pledge of Allegiance dominated. The book's subtitle of "The Trivial Pursuit of the Presidency" was accordingly apt.When the media-orchestrated campaign of Roger Ailes, known as "the mudmeister," along with cohort Lee Atwater, who had been trained by none other than Richard Nixon, reached fever pitch, and a "news event" consisted of Republican nominee, Vice-President George H.W. Bush, visiting a flag factory, Dan Rather and his CBS news cohorts refused to cover the event. CBS explained to the Republicans that if they wanted serious coverage then the campaign needed to get serious and talk about substantive policy matters rather than hide behind the flag and expect to receive prime time attention. Voters in other states envied the Nevada prerogative of voters, which permitted the alternative of the truly turned off, a vote for "None of the above," which turned out to be a popular category.Germond and Witcover present a detailed account of a campaign where glossy imagery and mud slinging obscured the real issues, beginning with rising American debt, which would continue to burgeon after Bush's victory over Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis. A highlight of the Republican's campaign was his promise at his party's New Orleans convention of, "Read my lips! No new taxes!" This was an irresponsible promise in view of the pervasive reality that economic circumstances vary and policies need to reflect those current circumstances.

Teddy White-Style Fun

Fellow political junkies think I'm crazy for considering 1988 such an entertaining election, and they have a point: '92 featured the Perot boomlet and the eventual winner running third in the polls in summer; '96 had Buchanan's shocking New Hampshire win and Clinton's strange comeback; and 2000, was, well, 2000. Maybe it's just that '88 was the first campaign I followed. But it was a dirty, sleazy fight, with two unappealing nominees. Both campaigns were riddled with mistakes -- Bush's choice of Quayle, then-frontrunner Dukakis refusing to campaign during August. Most interesting is the desperation inside the Democratic Party as they see their best shot in years collapse before their eyes. This is just a good, solid campaign book in the tradition of the old Making Of The President series.
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