From Publishers Weekly
In this critical biography, veteran Texas journalists Dubose and Reid tell the story of the boy from Sugarland, Tex., who rose from smalltown exterminator to majority leader of the House of Representatives, earning the nickname "the Hammer" along the way. All the major episodes of DeLay's career are vividly covered: his rise through the House ranks, the coup against Speaker Newt Gingrich, how DeLay built his formidable fund-raising operation and (allegedly) bullied the lobbyists of K Street into towing the GOP party line, his alliance with right-wing Zionists (Christian and Jewish), and his disdain for Bill Clinton. The book is written from a progressive perspective, and the authors do not engage in substantive policy discussions about the merits of DeLay's ideas. There is no examination, for example, of the literature on the efficacy of government regulation—Dubose and Reid simply assume that Delay's hardcore deregulation position is bad. For them, the House under Delay is "no longer a deliberative body" but rather functions as a "plebiscitary" system that merely rubber-stamps the wishes of the Republican leadership. They do, however, affirm that DeLay's positions are sincerely held—that he is a "conviction politician" who may be cynical about process but not about substance.
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Review
"...it helps illuminate conservatism's decline from ideas and individualism to the shallowness of money and power." --
New York Sun, September 28, 2004"Dubose and Reid... offer plenty of insight [on] the lives, luck and motivations of DeLay and George W. Bush." --
Austin-American Statesman, September 26, 2004"For readers intrigued by the ways politicians acquire and use power, this book will provide... hours of delightful reading." --
Library Journal, October 15, 2004"It's an eye-opening look at how extreme right-wing political views are seeping into our culture and affecting our lives." --
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 3, 2004"The book details his humble origins and meteoric rise." --
Dayton Daily News, September 28, 2004"[Dubose and Reid] have calmly, clearly, and pointedly laid out the story of DeLay's rise... to power." --
Washington Monthly, November issue"get... [Dubose and Reid's]
The Hammer. I'd recommend it even if they weren't friends of mine, which they are" --
Molly Ivans"terrific book... more than a compelling read, it's... a masterly account of an ordinary man's extraordinary climb to power" --
Dallas Morning News, September 26, 2004"this book opens a window not only on DeLay but the new Republican House and how it operates." --
October 22, 2004, Baltimore Chronicle.
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