The Emerging Democratic Majority by John B. Judis
$11.70
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Here the authors' own political biases become clear. "We need a new era of strong government--one in which government doesn't sit on the sidelines but makes a serious effort to solve the great national problems that divide Americans from one another," write Teixeira and Rogers. That sounds like the talk of Democrats disaffected by their party's Clinton-era moderations and, indeed, the authors essentially urge Democrats to revive their party's working-class roots. As for the Republicans, Teixeira and Rogers think they ought to act more like Democrats. Until one of the parties remembers the forgotten majority, "Democrats and Republicans will be reduced to 'marketing at the margins'--attempting to cobble together temporary electoral coalitions in a basically unfavorable and dealigned political universe." It's an intriguing analysis, albeit one more suited to Democratic interests than Republican ones. Fans of E.J. Dionne, John Judis, Robert Kuttner, and Robert Reich will want to have a copy of America's Forgotten Majority on their shelves. --John J. Miller
From Publishers Weekly
The future of American politics belongs to the party best able to win the hearts and votes of the white working class: that is Teixera and Rogers's thesis in a well-documented analysis of the current American political landscape that is coherent, insightful and refreshingly contrary to the prevailing views of Sunday morning pundits and politicos of both major parties. Citing enough exit polls and opinion polls to satisfy the most ardent political junkies, the authors (Teixera is a fellow at the Century Foundation, and Rogers is a professor of law, political science and sociology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison) build a convincing case that white working-class voters, not the recently fabled suburban soccer moms, were, and will be again, the true swing voters. The straightforwardly presented data indicate that, so far, the swinging has inclined toward the Republicans. But departing from conventional political wisdom, the electorate's swing to the right is less an embrace of traditional conservative values (less government is better government) than a reflection of the voters' loss of faith in government's effectiveness. Government, according to Teixera and Rogers's white working-class voters, no longer responds to real people's problems. The authors are not shy about offering suggestions to Democrats and Republicans on how they can capture the support of this crucial segment of American society. Teixera and Rogers reject what they see as the Democratic Leadership Council's abandonment of the traditional party commitment to government programs responsive to the white working class. They reject even more strongly the minimalist Republican view of government. Instead, the authors predict that the party that can fashion effective government programsAwhich ensure health-care benefits, educational opportunities and retirement security, for exampleAwill be the party of the 21st century. First serial to the Atlantic Monthly. (June)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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