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Voting to Kill: How 9/11 Launched the Era of Republican Leadership
 
 
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Voting to Kill: How 9/11 Launched the Era of Republican Leadership (Paperback)

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Key Phrases: relief first officer, strategist close, antiwar voices, United States, Democratic Party, Michael Moore (more...)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Geraghty made his mark blogging coverage of the Kerry presidential campaign for National Review. In this insightful book, he deconstructs all the theories about Republican popularity as part of a craving for family values and focuses on what he considers the real issue: national security and safety in the face of terrorist threats. Americans favor a political party they think will not hesitate to kill terrorists. Drawing on recollections by ordinary Americans of the fear they felt on 9/11 as they faced the harrowing choice of which child to pick up from school first, Geraghty believes this fear created "Security Moms and Dads" singularly focused on safety who believe that Republicans are most likely to deliver on that issue. Geraghty suggests that to have any hope of regaining political power, Democrats need to project a tougher image on terrorism and stronger support for defense spending. To remain in power, Republicans need to balance their hawkishness. Readers wondering how long the political agenda will be ruled by 9/11 will appreciate this comprehensive look at terrorism and American politics. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Review

"You want to know why the GOP has won big in 2002 and 2004? Read this book. You want to know why the public does not trust the Democratic Party to protect America? Read this book. This book is for everyone whose worldview changed on 9/11. After you read it, show it to people who have NOT accepted the post-9/11 reality we all face. This book might just open their eyes."

-- Rush Limbaugh --This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 366 pages
  • Publisher: Touchstone (September 19, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0743290429
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743290425
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,383,038 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing Subtracts like Division . . ., October 10, 2006
By David Avender (Los Palomitas, British Columbia, CANADA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   

Jim Geraghty's oddly titled book takes a timely look back at the elections of 2002 and 2004. As the subtitle points out, these elections inaugurated "an era of Republican leadership." In the 2000 presidential election, the Republican nominee lost the popular vote, even as Republicans were losing four seats in the Senate and two in the House.

But in the 2002 midterm election, Republicans defied historically grounded expectations of further losses and instead regained two Senate seats while holding their own in the House. Standing for reelection in 2004, George W. Bush not only won a narrow majority of the popular vote, but also increased his vote total by more than 11,000,000; Republicans picked up four seats in the Senate and two in the House. The era of Republican consolidation, if not dominance, seemed to have arrived

In this book Geraghty sets out to explain why. He finds the answer in Republican leadership on the issue of national security. He argues that 9/11 altered the psyche of the average American voter, attuning him to the mortal peril posed by the enemy who showed his face to such devastating effect on that day. "While the intensity of the post-9/11 emotions will fade to a certain extent," Geraghty writes, "something in the American consciousness changed permanently that day." In making his case, Geraghty tells the story of the elections of 2002 and 2004 mostly from the outside - thematically, drawing on the contemporaneous words of participants, pollsters, consultants, observers, commentators, journalists and, lest we forget, the bloggers.

Perhaps most striking is Geraghty's account of how quickly Democrats reverted to form following 9/11. Geraghty notes the initial, twisted post-9/11 reactions of such far-Left figures as Noam Chomsky and Michael Moore. Geraghty points out, for example, that within 24 hours of the 9/11 attack, Michael Moore was imputing guilt to the United States for "taxpayer-funded terrorism" and suggesting that some kind of cosmic payback was at work. Geraghty mordantly writes that "neither additional years nor the passage of weeks seemed to temper the reaction of those farthest to the left."

On the contrary, Geraghty shows that the intemperance of the far Left worked itself into the heart of the Democratic establishment as Senate minority leader Tom Daschle and Democratic party chairman Terry McAuliffe attended the 2004 Washington, D.C., premiere of Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11. Geraghty devotes a chapter to the proposition that Moore became a symbolic face of the Democratic party in 2004 and concludes: "The party that has the more appealing faces wins the elections." For the duration of Michael Moore's career, Republicans should pray to their God that Moore remains face of the Democratic party.

Geraghty places the ascendance of national security as an electoral issue in the context of events since 1972, and especially of the rise of McGovernism as the practical foreign-policy doctrine of the Democratic party. The wider context explains the Democrats' post-9/11 electoral weakness - but one can also observe in this context a striking deterioration of Republican electoral strength at the presidential level. Contrast President Bush's 2004 performance with that of his recent Republican predecessors who ran for a second term. As an unloved wartime president in 1972, Nixon defeated George McGovern with more than 60 percent of the popular vote and a crushing Electoral College margin of 503 votes. Seeking a second term against a solid Democratic opponent in the person of Walter Mondale in 1984, Reagan likewise won 59 percent of the popular vote and a crushing Electoral College margin of 512 votes. Facing an incredibly weak Democratic nominee in 2004 - an unlikable liberal from the only state McGovern carried in 1972 - George W. Bush won 51 percent of the popular vote and an Electoral College margin of 34 votes over John Kerry, securing victory only as the result of his narrow defeat of Kerry in Ohio.

In this broader context, the trend at the presidential level seems anything but encouraging for Republicans. In the blink of an eye states such as California, New York, and Illinois appear virtually to have slipped beyond the grasp of Republicans at the presidential level.

"Of all forms of human error," George Eliot writes in Middlemarch, "prophecy is the most avoidable." Geraghty does not hesitate to predict that Republicans stand to gain on the issue of national security in the upcoming midterm elections. It is a prediction that defies the gloom that has dogged Republicans in the spring and summer of 2006. In the book's closing pages, however, Geraghty acknowledges the existence of "difficulties in Iraq," suggesting that they may detract from the Republican edge on national security; but he asserts that in light of internal Democratic divisions the problems in Iraq "are not necessarily good news for the Democrats." To win in 2008, Geraghty bluntly asserts, "the Democrats need a hawk." I wonder if a slightly camouflaged dove might not be enough to do the trick. On the horizon Geraghty sees a "hawkish Hillary Clinton" and betrays no doubt that she will be the Democrats' 2008 nominee. He considers her a serious threat to Republicans because of her hawkishness. Contemplating a second Clinton presidency, Geraghty consoles his readers with the prospect of a silver lining: "All of this--Afghanistan, Iraq, and any future battlefields - would finally become their fight too." I doubt that Hillary Clinton is a hawk, any more than Bill Clinton was or is. Nevertheless, Geraghty's observation that "many on the left, including the shrilly whining harpies of the media," have performed a kind of moral blackmail - basically, obstructing prosecution of the war unless and until they themselves are returned to power - seems to me to strike the mother lode. It provides a sobering conclusion to a book that is by turns good-humored, optimistic, and shrewd.
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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding!, September 17, 2006
By Thomas Marshall Manson (Alexandria, VA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Geraghty has written the must-read book of the political season. It portends that even in the face of crappy poll numbers and an occassionally ill-focused agenda, Republicans are likely to continue their string of electoral successes in large measure because voters don't trust the Democrats and the American left to successfully prosecute the War on Terror.

Geraghty's book is exhaustively researched and yet remains a pleasure to read. His blogger's wit and irreverance combines with spot on analysis to make this the political book of the year.
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17 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars why the Michael Moore Party can't win, September 12, 2006
By Xrlq (Richmond, VA) - See all my reviews
Geraghty makes a persuasive case that the war on terror is not an election issue, but THE issue, and the reason why the Republicans are likely to dominate for some time to come unless the Democrats change their tune. Unfortunately, he makes an equally strong case that the Democrats probably won't change their tune in the foreseeable future, due to a large constituency that doesn't take terrorism seriously.

Geraghty does overstate his case in some instances, and understates it slightly in others, which is why I gave it 4 stars rather than 5. It's a pretty good book, but with a little more editing it could have been a great one.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars Regarding David Avender's customer review
David Avender's "customer review" above is plagiarized verbatim from my October 9, 2006 National Review book review of Geraghty's book. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Scott W. Johnson

3.0 out of 5 stars Geraghty: great writer who got 2006 wrong
Jim Geraghty is a great writer. He's entertaining. Insightful. A very good wordsmith. His "HillarySpot" blog is essential reading for the conservatively-inclined... Read more
Published on May 26, 2007 by R. P. Spretnak

5.0 out of 5 stars Great ready, funny author
This is a wonderful book by a great author. Jim Geraghty is a smart, insightful, and funny man. Though I disagree with his political views the book is very good at presenting... Read more
Published on January 9, 2007 by JKennedyGirl

4.0 out of 5 stars Still relevant, even after an election
One could be tempted to toss Jim Geraghty's thesis in the trash, given the results of the recent elections. Read more
Published on December 19, 2006 by Gary R Karr

1.0 out of 5 stars What do you do...
...if the entire premise of your book is blown out of the water by an actual election?

Ouch.
Published on November 25, 2006 by Big Omega

5.0 out of 5 stars Jim Geraghty: one of the more sensible National Review writers
A number of writers at the National Review foolishly believe that it might be good if the Republican Party is rebuked in the November elections. Read more
Published on October 3, 2006 by David Thomson

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