Hardball
How Politics Is Played Told by One Who Knows the Game
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4.0 • 44 Ratings
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
How politics is played by one who knows the game...
Chris Matthews has spent a quarter century on the playing field of American politics—from right-hand man of Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill to host of NBC's highest rated cable talk show Hardball. In this revised and updated edition of his political classic, he offers fascinating new stories of raw ambition, brutal rivalry, and exquisite seduction and reveals the inside rules that govern the game of power.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A former Senate aide, presidential speech writer and assistant to Tip O'Neill, Matthews here offers an entertaining view of Washington politics. He covers much the same ground as Hedrick Smith's The Power Game but writes more informally and with amused tolerance of ``the true believers in the power of political self-interest.'' The anecdotes illuminate rules for success in playing hardball, which Matthews defines as ``clean, aggressive Machiavellian politics'': keep your enemies in front of you. A Reagan example of savvy is among the most vivid: the president's remark during the debates with Mondale that he would not exploit for political purposes ``his opponent's youth and inexperience.'' Matthews, who writes a column for the San Francisco Chronicle, turns unexpectedly stern in his discussion of a third rule: the press is the enemy. ``Like policemen, they are always on duty. Don't trust any of them.''
Customer Reviews
Hardball
It's truly amazing how Mathews strives to disguise bias through "fact based reportage" with such a left leaning slant - it would make George McGovern whence in his grave! Why does Mathews feel like he has to win every argument, even when it is blatantly obvious to the truly objective that he does not prevail many times..
Brother Chris continues to heap red meat to his leftist lemmings with a biting, cutting, rat-a-tat-tat delivery that belies rational debate and critique. He should review some of the thoughtful yet pointed discourse between John Kenneth Galbraith and William F Buckley if he aspires to such lofty "debate heights"
The book Hardball is warmed over tripe from a past Tip O'Neill staffer and Jimmy Carter speech writer.
Hardball?? No no.... More like Foosball !