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Power Plays: Win or Lose--How History's Great Political Leaders Play the Game
 
 
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Power Plays: Win or Lose--How History's Great Political Leaders Play the Game [Paperback]

Dick Morris (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0060004444 978-0060004446 June 17, 2003

Dick Morris is one of the frankest and most incisive political observers in America today. A fiercely intelligent presidential advisor and a popular columnist and political analyst for the Fox News Channel, Morris now brings his brilliant strategic mind to this fascinating survey of the most dramatic political moves in history.

Morris identifies five types of power play and focuses on politicians whose careers have skyrocketed after implementing one of them successfully -- or foundered in the wake of misjudgment. He chronicles both the wildly effective and the disastrous, from ideologues like Ronald Reagan and Winston Churchill, who stood on principle and waited for their moment to shine, to the disavowal of environmental issues that, he argues, cost Al Gore the presidency in 2000. The result is an irreverent and enlightening playbook that holds lessons equally valuable to the planning of a political campaign, a business venture -- or even George W. Bush's War on Terror.


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Dick Morris is one of America's sharpest political minds. As a professional consultant, he has helped candidates from both parties understand public opinion and win elections--most notably President Clinton in 1996 (an experience Morris described in the bestselling book Behind the Oval Office). He is also a founding father of "triangulation," a strategy Clinton employed to great effect; according to Morris, George W. Bush also uses it quite well. "The identification of certain problems with certain parties or factions opens up a magnificent strategic opportunity: the chance to solve the other side's problems," writes Morris in Power Plays. In other words, if public concerns about welfare dependency drive voters toward the GOP, then Democrats ought to confront this issue head-on. "Solve the problems that keep the other side in business, and it will go broke. Give them what they want and they will go away." Power Plays, however, is not simply a primer on triangulation; it is an analysis of how various political strategies have helped and hindered candidates. Morris writes at length about determining when standing for principle works and when it doesn't, as well as a number of other approaches, including "divide and conquer" and "reform your own party." This is a first-rate book for readers who enjoy the gamesmanship of politics. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Aspiring politicians who can't afford to hire high-priced campaign consultants could do a lot worse than to buy this election manual from former Clinton political guru Morris (Behind the Oval Office). He offers 20 case studies illustrating how history's greatest politicians sealed their fate by following or ignoring six classic Morris rules: "Triangulate," "Divide and Conquer," "Reform Your Own Party," etc. These strategies work, Morris maintains, regardless of party affiliation or ideological bent. For example, Morris shows how both Bill Clinton (on welfare) and George W. Bush (on education) managed to trounce the opposition by co-opting its core issues a classic "triangulation" maneuver. In contrast, Morris says, both Woodrow Wilson and Barry Goldwater failed to provide a convincing explanation as to why their fringe ideas (the League of Nations and passionate anticommunism, respectively) were right for America. This is quintessential Morris ideology: the content is less important than the approach. Ronald Reagan, in this understanding, won the White House because he was able to "Stand on Principle" and present a clear, consistent description of who he was and what he stood for. Al Gore lost because he failed at the same task. Obviously, such a reductive analysis oversimplifies an extraordinarily complicated process. Morris's arguments are broadly convincing, however, and work well in the context of a "beginner's manual" on political strategy, despite some occasionally spooky language Reagan's move toward social conservatism in the 1960s, Morris writes, was like an "established corporation launching a new product line."
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 360 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial (June 17, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060004444
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060004446
  • Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (31 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #786,492 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Dick Morris served as Bill Clinton's political consultant for twenty years. A regular political commentator on Fox News and other networks, he is the author of six New York Times bestsellers (all with Eileen McGann) and one Washington Post bestseller.

 

Customer Reviews

31 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Instant, fast-moving political and history primer: G-R-E-A-T, May 3, 2002
By 
In Power Plays former Clinton advisor and Fox News Channel political analyst Dick Morris has written an instant political and historical classic for the early 21st century that mirrors and duplicates the energy and quality of an instant political and historical classic of the late 20th century.

Thr other book was Chris Mathews' 1988 book, Hardball, which pulled together anecdotes and strands culled from his years working as a Congressional staffer. Critics called Hardball a modern day version of Machiavelli's The Prince, it became a best-seller, and for many years was MUST reading for anyone event remotely in a political career or studying political science. Hardball also solidified Chris Mathews' role as a superb political analyst.

Now, in Power Plays, Morris offers us another book with another great title -- and the content lives up to the title. Even a person who finds politics and history a bit dull will
find it hard to put this book down. Power Plays MOVES...and DELIVERS.

Lucidly and convincingly, Morris outlines what he calls the five classic kinds of Power Plays: Stand on Principal, Divide and Conquer, Triangulate (enacting some of your
opponents programs so they don't have ammunition, while still delivering to your supporters) , Reform Your Own Party, Use a New Technology, and Mobilizing the Nation in Times of Crisis.

But Morris doesn't offer sleep-inducing stuff: he provides clear-cut, highly lively, quote-filled and painstakingly-researched examples of powerful politicos (in the US and in other countries) who succeeded in using, or failed because they failed to use, these kinds of power plays.

Power Plays is a primer for those in power, those who aspire to power, and those who analyze power. I suspect it'll be in print for a LONG time since much of it will not be outdated. The only part that will date is his analysis of President Bush (who triangulates and mobilizes the nation) compared to former President Bill Clinton -- but this is a book will probably be reprinted and updated for many years to come.

Morris also notes that these power plays can be applied to the business world -- for advancing a company or office employee's position, image and power.

My favorite sections were his analysis of Al Gore (unsuccessful: didn't stand on principle), the late NY Governor Nelson Rockefeller (failed triangulation), Bill Clinton and
George W. Bush (successful triangulations), plus the chapters on FDR, JFK and Richard Nixon. The most dazzling foreign leader power plays: Churchill's (several kinds of power plays). The most dazzling American leader, in terms of using the power plays: Ronald Reagan.

This 360-page, well-index book is MUST READING for anyone a)interested in a political career, b)students of political science, c)office seekers, d)students of history who
will enjoy the way he has classified events and personalities into specific political trends and strategies, d)anyone who is interested in politics.

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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Some Valuable Insights But Not WIthout Its Flaws, November 16, 2002
Dick Morris, well known political operative and architect of Clinton's 1996 "triangulation" strategy has attempted to write a book of political history. He partially succeeds and partially fails. In this book, Morris looks at a number of different political figures from the 19th and 20th century. (Actually, except for Lincoln, all are from the 20th century) In trying to analyze why some had success and others failed, Morris breaks his stories into categories of strategies. Some politicians such as Churchill and De Gaulle are regarded as having stood up for their beliefs while waiting for others to come around to their view. Others are regarded as having triangulated their positions between two opposing views. These would include G.W. Bush and Clinton of course. He also examines politicians who exploited new technologies such as FDR with radio and JFK with television. The book is generally interesting but Morris has two major problems. First, he sees all policy advocated by political figures as strategic. This is certainly what I would associate with the Clinton administration but I hardly think that Churchill had electoral strategy in mind when he entered the wildreness for a dozen years. Morris fails or perhaps cannot differentiate governing from running for office. The other problem is in his insistence on forcing square pegs into round holes. There is really very little similarity between De Gaulle's France and Lincoln's pre-Civil War united States. Nor can Wilson's problems in selling the Versailles treaty be equated with actually running for office. In my view, Morris would have done better to simply take a dozen or so of these stories and looked at each one as unique while using his expertise in electoral strategy to show what a political figure did right or wrong. To force each story into a few very broad categories weakens this book considerably. I would still recommend reading it, however.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Splendid Historic Look at Campaign Strategy From A Master, November 5, 2002
"Power Plays" is one of the finest books I've read on politics. Dick Morris does an exemplary job underscoring the successes and failures of major political figures ranging from the likes of Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill and Charles De Gaulle to Bill Clinton, Tony Blair and George W. Bush. He successfully compares and contrasts how politicians like Clinton and Blair successfuly reformed their political parties, and led them to victory, while others, most notably George McGovern, led reformations within their parties yet lost their own bid for political power. Morris succinctly outlines several different types of political power plays, ranging from standing on one's own principles to divide and conquer and what Morris has coined as "triangulation"; co-opting the positions of your opponents and turning them into yours. "Power Plays" is a fascinating look at political history which should be required reading for both politicians and historians.

Dick Morris has organized successful political campaigns since his days as a student at New York City's illustrious Stuyvesant High School. His perceptive insights on current political campaign strategy as well as his terse historical overview of major American and foreign politicians will be of interest to anyone intrigued with politics, not only politicians and historians.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
For some leaders, the art of politics is not about movement but about positioning. Read the first page
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nomination acceptance speech, fear campaign
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New York, United States, Labour Party, White House, Bill Clinton, Lyndon Johnson, Barry Goldwater, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, Nelson Rockefeller, Abraham Lincoln, New Deal, Tony Blair, Soviet Union, Fireside Chat, Harry Truman, Wall Street, Woodrow Wilson, Fifth Republic, New Hampshire, Upper House, Winston Churchill, Chamber of Deputies, Charles de Gaulle, Dred Scott
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