Broken Government
How Republican Rule Destroyed the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
The concluding volume of The New York Times bestselling trilogy
One of today's most outspoken and respected political commentators asks: How can our democracy function when the key institutions of government no longer operate as intended by the Constitution? Stepping back to assess three decades of nearly continuous Republican rule, John W. Dean surveys the damage done to the three branches of government and traces their decline through the presidencies of Nixon, Ford, Reagan, Bush I, and Bush II. Speaking to what the average moderate citizen can do to combat extremism, authoritarianism, incompetence, and the Republicans' deliberate focus on polarizing social issues, Broken Government is a must-have book for voters this election year.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In his latest anti-Republican polemic, ex Nixon White House counsel and Watergate whistle-blower Dean (Conservatives Without Conscience) moves from policy to "process" how necessary government functions are corrupted and hobbled by Republican politicians and their ethos of authoritarianism, secrecy, partisanship and dogmatic contempt for the public sphere. It's a long indictment. The last Republican Congress, Dean contends, rubber-stamped Bush's policies, shut Democrats out of the legislative process, neglected pressing issues and made a shambles of government finances. Meanwhile, the Bush administration "the worst presidency ever" has sought to replace constitutional checks and balances with a "unitary executive" that brooks no congressional interference and undermines civil rights. All of this is enabled by the swelling ranks of "fundamentalists" on the federal bench and Supreme Court (some of whom, he insists, committed perjury to get confirmed). The author, a former Republican, bolsters his procedural analysis with insights from political scientists, but doesn't offer procedural reforms; the cure he prescribes is to stop voting Republican. (He hails the new Democratic Congress for repairing much of the damage done by the GOP.) Dean's take on "process" mainly a conventional reverence for the Constitution and bipartisanship isn't acute, but he presents a vigorous critique of the Republican machinery.