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The Ambition and the Power: The Fall of Jim Wright : A True Story of Washington Hardcover – May 15, 1992

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 11 ratings

Profiles the man whose thirty-five-year congressional career ended ignominiously in the spring of 1989
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Viking Pr (May 15, 1992)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0831783028
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0831783020
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.8 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.5 x 2.5 x 9.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 11 ratings

About the author

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John M. Barry
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I was born in... Nah, let's not start that far back. Let's just say after dropping out of graduate school in history I became a football coach-- in fact, the first story I ever sold was to a coaching magazine, about a way to change blocking assignments at the line of scrimmage, and I was on the staff of a guy who was named national coach of the year. I quit coaching to write, first as a Washington journalist covering economics and national politics, then I finally began doing what I always intended and wanted to do: write books. Two of those books have in turn led me into active involvement in a couple of policy areas. Anyway, here's the more formal version of my bio:

John M. Barry is a prize-winning and New York Times best-selling author whose books have won several dozen awards. In 2005 the National Academies of Science named The Great Influenza: The story of the deadliest pandemic in history, a study of the 1918 pandemic, the year’s outstanding book on science or medicine. In 1998 Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America, won the Francis Parkman Prize of the Society of American Historians for the year’s best book of American history. His latest book is Roger Williams and The Creation of the American Soul: Church, State, and the Birth of Liberty, which has been named a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, to be awarded late spring 2013. ( Scroll down for more about this book, including a syndicated op ed based on it.)

His writing has received not only formal awards but less formal recognition as well. In 2004 GQ named Rising Tide one of nine pieces of writing essential to understanding America; that list also included Abraham Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address and Martin Luther King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” His first book, The Ambition and the Power: A true story of Washington, was cited by The New York Times as one of the eleven best books ever written about Washington and the Congress. His second book The Transformed Cell: Unlocking the Mysteries of Cancer, coauthored with Dr. Steven Rosenberg, was published in twelve languages. And a story about football he wrote was selected for inclusion in an anthology of the best football writing of all time published in 2006 by Sports Illustrated.

He has had considerable influence on both pandemic policy and flood protection. Both the Bush and Obama administrations sought his advice on influenza preparedness and response, and he was a member of the original team which developed plans for non-pharmaceutical interventions to mitigate a pandemic. The National Academies of Science asked him to give the keynote speech at its first international scientific meeting on pandemic influenza, and he was the only non-scientist on a federal government Infectious Disease Board of Experts.

In the area of water resources, he has been equally active. In 2006 he became the only non-scientist ever to give the National Academies annual Abel Wolman Distinguished Lecture, a lecture which focuses on some aspect of water. After Hurricane Katrina, the Louisiana congressional delegation asked him to chair a bipartisan working group on flood protection, and he now serves on the board overseeing levee districts in metropolitan New Orleans and on the Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, which is responsible for the state's hurricane protection. Barry has worked with state, federal, United Nations, and World Health Organization officials on influenza, water-related disasters, and risk communication.

Barry sits on advisory boards at M.I.T’s Center for Engineering Systems Fundamentals and the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health as well as on the board of the Society of American Historians and American Heritage Rivers.

He has also been keynote speaker at such varied events as a White House Conference on the Mississippi Delta and an International Congress on Respiratory Viruses, and he has given talks in such venues as the National War College, the Council on Foreign Relations, Harvard Business School, and elsewhere. He is co-originator of Riversphere, a $100 million center being developed by Tulane University; it will be the first facility in the world dedicated to comprehensive river research.

His articles have appeared in such scientific journals as Nature and Journal of Infectious Disease as well as in lay publications ranging from Sports Illustrated to The New York Times, The Washington Post, Fortune, Time, Newsweek, and Esquire. A frequent guest on every broadcast network in the US, he has appeared on such shows as NBC's Meet the Press, ABC's World News, and NPR's All Things Considered, and on such foreign media as the BBC and Al Jazeera. He has also served as a consultant for Sony Pictures and contributed to award-winning television documentaries.

Before becoming a writer, Barry coached football at the high school, small college, and major college levels. Currently Distinguished Scholar at the Center for Bioenvironmental Research of Tulane and Xavier Universities, he lives in New Orleans.

Barry's latest book focuses on the development of both the idea of separation of church and state and the first expression of individualism in the modern sense. These two issues-- how we define the relationship between church and state and between the individual and the state-- have opened fault lines which have divided America throughout our history up to today. Here is an op ed syndicated by The Los Angeles Times February 5, 2012 :

A Puritan's `War Against Religion.'

In January, while conservative Christians and GOP presidential candidates were charging that "elites" have launched "a war against religion," a federal court in Rhode Island ordered a public school to remove a prayer mounted on a wall because it imposed a belief on 16-year-old Jessica Ahlquist. The ruling seems particularly fitting because it was consistent not only with the 1st Amendment but with the intent of Roger Williams, who founded Rhode Island expressly to provide religious liberty and who called such forced exposure to prayer "spiritual rape."

As Williams' nearly 400-year-old comment demonstrates, the conflict over the proper relationship between church and state is the oldest in American history. The 1st Amendment now defines this relationship, but understanding the full meaning of the amendment requires understanding its history, for the amendment was a specific response to specific historical events and was written with the recognition that freedom of religion was inextricably linked to freedom itself.

The church-state conflict began when Puritans, envisioning a Christian nation, founded what John Winthrop called "a citty upon a hill" in Massachusetts, and Williams rejected that vision for another: freedom. He insisted that the state refrain from intervening in the relationship between humans and God, stating that even people advocating "the most Paganish, Jewish, Turkish, or Antichristian consciences and worships" be allowed to pray — or not pray — freely, and that "forced worship stinks in God's nostrils."

Yet Williams was no atheist. He was a devout Puritan minister who, like other Massachusetts Puritans, fled religious persecution in England. Upon his arrival in 1631 he was considered so godly that Boston Puritans had asked him to lead their church. He declined — because he considered their church insufficiently pure.

Reverence for both Scripture and freedom led Williams to his position. His mentor was Edward Coke, the great English jurist who ruled, "The house of every one is as his castle," extending the liberties of great lords — and an inviolate refuge where one was free — to the lowest English commoners. Coke pioneered the use of habeas corpus to prevent arbitrary imprisonment. And when Chancellor of England Thomas Egerton said, "Rex est lex loquens; the king is the law speaking," and agreed that the monarch could "suspend any particular law" for "reason of state," Coke decreed instead that the law bound the king. Coke was imprisoned — without charge — for his view of liberty, but that same view ran in Williams' veins.

Equally important to Williams was Scripture. Going beyond the "render unto Caesar" verse in the New Testament, he recognized the difficulty in reconciling contradictory scriptural passages as well as different Bible translations. He even had before him an example of a new translation that served a political purpose. King James had disliked the existing English Bible because in his view it insufficiently taught obedience to authority; the King James Bible would correct that.

Given these complexities, Williams judged it impossible for any human to interpret all Scripture without error. Therefore he considered it "monstrous" for one person to impose any religious belief on another. He also realized that any government-sponsored prayer required a public official to pass judgment on something to do with God, a sacrilegious presumption. He also knew that when one mixes religion and politics, one gets politics. So to protect the purity of the church, he demanded — 150 years before Jefferson — a "wall of separation between the garden of the church and the wilderness of the world."

Massachusetts had no such wall, compelled religious conformity and banished Williams for opposing it. Seeking "soul liberty," he founded Providence Plantations and established an entirely secular government that granted absolute freedom of religion. The governing compact of every other colony in the Americas, whether English, French, Spanish or Portuguese, claimed the colony was being founded to advance Christianity. Providence's governing compact did not mention God. It did not even ask God's blessing.

Williams next linked religious and political freedom. It was then universally believed that governments derived their authority from God. Even Winthrop, after being elected governor in Massachusetts, told voters, "Though chosen by you, our authority comes from God."

Williams disputed this. Considering the state secular, he declared governments mere "agents" deriving their authority from citizens and having "no more power, nor for longer time, than the people … shall betrust them with." This statement sounds self-evident now. It was revolutionary then.

The U.S. Constitution, like Providence's compact, does not mention God. It does request a blessing, but not from God; it sought "the blessings of liberty," Williams' "soul liberty." As Justice Robert Jackson wrote, "This freedom was first in the Bill of Rights because it was first in the forefathers' minds; it was set forth in absolute terms, and its strength is its rigidity."

Eight years after the Constitution's adoption, the Senate confirmed this view in unanimously approving a treaty. It stated: "[T]he government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion."

Yet the argument continues. Presidential candidates and evangelicals ignore American history and insist on injecting religion into politics. They proclaim their belief in freedom — even while they violate it.

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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2015
    I read this book when it first came out and time has done nothing to dim my memory. John Barry did an excellent job of chronicling the fall of Jim Wright. One cannot help but draw comparisons to what is going on in current Congress and wonder if John Boenher will wind up in the same boat. Wright's downfall was brought about by an unscrupulous fellow congressman (Newt Gingrich) who mislead the 'facts' against Wright and was aided by fellow members on the Ethics Committee who were led around by a power-hungry, glory seeking investigator. Ultimately though, Wright was his own worst enemy in trying to push an agenda that rivaled that of then-President Reagan. While no fan of Reagan, it was clear Wright stepped across the line in promoting his own agenda, especially with the Contras. Congress does not have to agree with a President's policy and has the right, and constitutional duty to confer or reject such policies. But put an alternative up? Definitely crossing the constitutional line, much as what is happening today. Makes one remember that old saying, "The more things change the more they remain the same." Wright was felled, Gingrich later brought down by his own ethics conflict and those who made a name for themselves in this whole episode have moved on. Mr. Boehner watch out, you are next
    Excellent book on the inner workings of Congress, especially within the power structure of the then-Democratic majority in the House. Definitely worth reading.
    4 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2010
    For all the thousands of politics books out there today, it is hard to understand why this book has gone out of print and is so hard to find. This is probably because Jim Wright's tenure as Speaker of the House was so brief and he came between more outsize personalities Tip O'Neil and Newt Gingrich.

    That's unfortunate, because this is the best book I've read on the true inner workings of Congress. Jim Wright was a hard personality and not the warm and fuzzy type, but he was toppled probably because he was too effective and too driven, and when Republicans ganged up on him, he did not have the support of his squeamish caucus.

    In the end, the operation of Congress and congressional leadership pivots on delicately handling the enormous egos of Members, and John Barry's book does an incredible job teasing that out by chronicling Wright's brief, but nonetheless fascinating two-year run in the Speaker's rostrum. If you're a politics junkie, get your hands on a cheap copy of the book and you'll plow through it in a week or two. Well worth your time.
    10 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2021
    This book was listed as being in very good condition. No mention was made of the very yellowed pages, torn cover or broken spine. Very disappointing.
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2021
    The downfall of Speaker Jim Wright is not well remembered. There are some moments that still very much speak today. For instance a Christmas party where Senators Bob Dole and Joe Biden discuss the state of their Iowa campaigns for President. There are also many lessons and "what ifs."
  • Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2007
    Long (760 pages), slow, and sordid might sound like a back-handed title for a five-star review. Since the book is out of print, and only one used copy is available, it hardly matters. Nevertheless I want to congratulate John M. Barry for researching and writing the most detailed and accurate description I've ever read of how Congress and the American political system functions. It doesn't build confidence, but it's knowledge that all citizens should confront before they toot and vote. Partisans, don't worry! The portrayal of Demublicans is no more wart-free than that of Republirats. If you believe, as my American Grandfather did, that the electoral process usually sends people of above-average ability and character to Washington, you'd better not read this book lest you become morose and disillusioned.
    Barry's more recent books, Rising Tide & The Great Influenza, are a good deal more readable for intellectual recreation -- excellent books, in fact -- but this is his masterpiece of reportage.
    8 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on December 15, 2000
    This book is incredible in depth of research, interviews with key players in the House of Representatives, a balanced approached, and analysis. It reveals more of the inner workings of the House of Representatives than any other single source. A must read for anyone who wants to understand how the House works, and at the same time how Speaker Jim Wright lost the speakership.
    9 people found this helpful
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