To Make Men Free
A History of the Republican Party
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- $279.00
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- $279.00
Descripción editorial
From the New York Times bestselling author of Democracy Awakening, a comprehensive history of the GOP and its evolving priorities.
“The most comprehensive account of the GOP and its competing impulses... an important contribution to understanding where we are today.” ―Los Angeles Times
When Abraham Lincoln helped create the Republican Party on the eve of the Civil War, his goal was economic opportunity for all Americans. Yet the party quickly became mired in an identity crisis. Would it be the party of democratic ideals? Or the party of moneyed interests?
In To Make Men Free, acclaimed historian Heather Cox Richardson traces the shifting ideology of the Republican Party from the antebellum era to the Great Recession. While progressive Republicans like Teddy Roosevelt and Dwight Eisenhower revived Lincoln’s vision and expanded the government, their opponents appealed to Americans’ latent racism and xenophobia to regain political power, linking taxation and regulation to redistribution and socialism. In the modern era, the schism within the Republican Party has grown wider, pulling the GOP ever further from its founding principles.
To Make Men Free is a sweeping history of the party that was once considered America’s greatest political hope, but now lies in disarray.
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Under President Lincoln, Congress passed the first income tax, encouraged immigration, and strengthened the Federal government; Theodore Roosevelt urged business regulation; Eisenhower supported government funding of schools, roads, and hospitals. Sadly, writes Richardson, Boston College professor of history (Wounded Knee: Party Politics and the Road to An American Massacre), in this opinionated history, upon these figures' exit from the scene, their party reversed course to take up its role as the protector of the rich. Lincoln and his Republican contemporaries believed government should promote individual economic advancement, but their successors (well before the Russian revolution) denounced such thinking as "socialism" and "communism." In the first decade of the 20th century, a new generation of Republican progressives supported TR's reforms, but by the 1920s their influence was minuscule. Eisenhower's popularity gave middle-of-the-road modern Republicanism a short-lived cachet, but, Richardson argues, the subsequent half century has seen the party harden into a defender of jingoism, privilege, and property under the banner of Movement Conservatism. The election of Barack Obama, a Democrat, signaled a "return to the vision of Republicans Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, and Eisenhower," just as it "revealed the hollow core of the twenty-first-century Republican Party." Richardson aptly ends by wondering if the modern Republican Party "will find a way to stay committed to the ideals of its founders."