Revenge for the Sixties
Sam Alito and the Triumph of the Conservative Legal Movement
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- $349.00
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- $349.00
Descripción editorial
The first-ever biography of the most pivotal Justice on the Supreme Court whose decisions, like the overturning of Roe, will drive the reshaping of America, by prize-winning journalist Peter Canellos.
When the Supreme Court handed down its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson, the landmark case overturning Roe v. Wade, it marked a turning point in the lives of millions of Americans. It was also the culmination of a decades-long movement whose grievances were embodied by the man who wrote the court’s opinion: Samuel Anthony Alito Jr.
Steely in his demeanor, with an impassive appearance that defies changing fashions, Alito could be the family lawyer in a 1960s television drama. But when he talks there is an emotional undercurrent, a fast-flowing stream beneath a placid surface. This is a man driven to push boundaries and mold ideas. His aim is to right the wrongs of the past six decades, as he saw them. He was the prized son of an Italian-born father and a mother whose parents emigrated from Italy shortly before her birth, worked their way into the middle class despite anti-Catholic prejudice and humiliating setbacks like evictions, and exacting big achievement demands of their children. But his family’s values came under attack during the sixties and later when Alito was at Princeton as the Vietnam war raged, women demanded equality, and their brand of patriotism was devalued.
The Federalist Society provided a safe space for Alito and those like him, and he moved fast up the judicial ladder to eventually land on the Supreme Court. There he has been aggressive in pushing the law in new, conservative directions—from pushing for expanding rights for the religious conservatives, overturning affirmative action, expanding the right to bear arms to thwart gun controls, and reducing the power of the Environmental Protection Agency. And finally—most crucial to his legacy—he was the author of Dobbs v. Jackson, bringing the conservative legal movement full circle in overruling Roe v. Wade. His ethnic and religious background, his intellectual confidence, and his unyielding determination are all illustrative of a group of white men who, beset by grievance, embarked on a decades-long mission to change the rules that govern society.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Politico editor Canellos (The Great Dissenter) offers a razor-sharp biography of conservative Supreme Court justice Samuel Alito. The book opens by exploring how Alito's upbringing in Italian American New Jersey suburbia and the culture shock he experienced as a middle-class student at Princeton formed the bedrock for his later embittered judicial response to progressive social change. While he was at Princeton, explosive protests against the Vietnam War culminated in the expulsion of the ROTC, of which Alito was a member, leading him to nurture an aggrieved response to liberalism—he thought of the protesters as privileged students "free to challenge authority because they had nothing to lose." The same upheavals that drove Alito rightward sparked the wave of conservative legal activism, spearheaded by the Federalist Society, that would propel Alito to the Supreme Court in 2005 after the failed nomination of moderate Harriet Myers, Canellos notes. Revisiting Alito's most controversial Supreme Court decisions, Canellos painstakingly documents how Alito's professed dedication to originalism is flexible depending on conservatives' agenda. Though Canellos's legal analysis is meticulous, it can drag; more juicy and haunting are observations he collects from Alito's youthful associates—"Nobody would describe him... as humble or a nice guy anymore," remarks one college friend. It's a revealing deconstruction of an inscrutable justice whose tenure has "rocked the facade of American law."