2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amusing, insightful look at the 1992 Presidential election., February 27, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Upside Down and Inside Out: The 1992 Elections and American Politics (Paperback)
This book does more than offer a funny, learned, and well paced analysis of the 1992 Presidential election, it does so while at the same time offering an interesting theory about political conflict in America. For Busch and Ceaser, the basic conflict which has defined american political life is one between "insiders and outsiders'. Clinton got elected in large measure because he was an "insider' who was able to sell himself as an "outsider' to a public distrustful of the inside washington establishment of which George Bush was so paradigmatic a representative. Perot , on the other hand , was far TOO outside, to put it mildly. In short, a book which I would reccomend to all students of American Politics, and one which might be useful in an introductory college course.
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