Fotografía de autor
9 Obras 114 Miembros 2 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

G. Calvin Mackenzie is Goldfarb Family Distinguished Professor of Government at Colby College where he has taught since 1978. His specialty areas include presidential transitions and the politics of presidential appointments, and he has been a consultant on these matters to presidential staff and mostrar más congressional committees. He is the author or editor of scores of articles and nearly twenty books, including The Liberal Hour: Washington and the Politics of Change in the 1960s (co-authored with historian Robert Weisbrot), which was a finalist for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in History. mostrar menos

Obras de G. Calvin Mackenzie

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male
Organizaciones
Colby College

Miembros

Reseñas

A very thorough and readable history of the politics of the 60's. The authors present the personalities of the key figures in a very vivid and unvarnished way.
 
Denunciada
grandpahobo | otra reseña | Sep 26, 2019 |
it's not that Mackenzie and Weisbrot write on The Liberal Hour (realizing my interest in liberal values), rather they point out how it was squandered which earns the rating. They date the liberal hour from 1963 to 1966. Kennedy gets credit for 11 months of the liberal hour, taking the election of '62 which left him majorities in both chambers, and felt the wind at his back. Johnson made a good deal of the momentum Kennedy left him, and used JFK's death as a call to his agenda. Johnson was the man, possibly ever in Capitol Hill history to bring home a complete legislative package. The authors point to Johnson's hubris and the liberal faults which led to programs they couldn't fulfill

The book separates the issues of the time as separate chapters, and treats them as if they had a cabinet portfolio. The Liberal Hour is therefore, not a diary, a chronology. The issues of the day interlaced, not only in the minds of the White House, but in the figures of the time For all the progress towards the Great Society, the quote from Dr King sums it up, paraphrasing. Viet Nam ended the Great Society.

The authors point to the confluence of the three branches achieving a liberal synergy, and offer a thorough review of the Warren court to the hour. While they have placed '63 - '66 as its highest point, they say that with the appointment of Warren Burger as Chief Justice in Nixon's first days in '69, the Liberal Hour was over and every one knew it.
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Denunciada
applemcg | otra reseña | Sep 27, 2017 |

Premios

Estadísticas

Obras
9
Miembros
114
Popularidad
#171,985
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
2
ISBNs
24

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