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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Book for Politics Junkies, September 17, 2000
Germond and Whitcover carry on the tradition of Theodore H. White's "Making of the President" series with their recap of the 1992 election. Theirs is the most complete recap available of the campaign that put Bill Clinton in the White House. They are experienced and vetran reporters who have seen many campaigns and are able to capture every nuance in a complete and readable manner.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Must reading for political junkies, December 28, 2004
I have always been a fan of Jack Germond. For years, I have watched him on news programs such as "McLaughlin Group" and "Inside Washington." His comments, dry humor, and honest opinions of the situation have often been a sharp contrast to the more partisan voices heard on those programs. However, until I read this book, I had no idea he was such a talented writer. I had of course read some of his political commentary over the years, but that is really not a test of someone's ability to write a book.
From the book, three facts about the 1992 presidential election are strikingly clear:
*) Bill Clinton is a masterful politician, he understood exactly what the electorate wanted in 1992. Despite all his personal, political baggage, he managed to handily defeat an incumbent president.
*) George H. W. Bush is a terrible politician; he understood almost nothing about what the electorate wanted in 1992. Bill Clinton didn't beat him; he lost to Bill Clinton. The best line I have ever heard about him was uttered shortly after he was elected, "The American people wanted a caretaker president and they got one."
*) Ross Perot is a genius at making money, running a business and getting things done in a business context. However, if he were placed in a situation where he couldn't control everything, such as being president of the United States, he would have been a disaster.
Germond and Witcover take you through the election of 1992, which was rocked by some of the best scandals and pseudo-scandals of modern political times. I am a political junkie and thoroughly enjoyed the frolic back through the stories of Gennifer Flowers, Bill Clinton and the draft, Ross Perot's accusations of how the Republicans planned to disrupt his daughter's wedding, Bush's glance at his watch during one of the debates, Admiral Stockdale's being utterly clueless during the VP debate, and what the issues really were. As the Clinton people so famously reminded themselves, "It's the economy stupid." Despite all the other mindless fluff, the presidential election was ultimately decided by the performance of the economy. Which is a credit to the American electorate.
It is clear that the authors were almost constantly inside the political tents, having a wealth of firsthand knowledge about how the campaigns were handling themselves. I learned many new things about the campaign, how disorganized the Bush campaign really was, how George H. W. Bush was so clueless about the country outside his privileged position and how the Clinton people worked. I came away with renewed appreciation for how talented Clinton's political operatives were. While he is a master politician, he cannot be given all the credit. They knew what to do and how to handle all types of problems, from "bimbo eruptions" to facts about the economic performance of the country.
This is the best book on a presidential election that I have ever read. Not only are the authors experts at political reporting, they also excel at putting the words together to prove it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Strange Enough!, August 24, 2001
The Germond/Witcover series is the best set of "campaign books" in recent years. And while the solid reporting continues in this effort, there's something missing. Many political junkies rank 1992 as the oddest election in memory, stranger even than the de facto tie of the 2000 race. Why? Two reasons: the inexplicable buoyancy of Bill Clinton, and the Perot phenomenon -- that brief springtime period when a businessman on a third party ticket shot to 40 percent in the polls while the Democratic nominee fell to third place (less than 25 percent!) and then recovered to win the election -- and oust an incumbent Republican who had polled a 91 percent approval rating less than two years earlier. Germond and Witcover tell the whole story, but the sense of the bizarre that pervaded that election is lacking.
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