Synopses & Reviews
One of our most visible, trenchant, and witty political commentators, the author of the bestselling
Why Americans Hate Politics, offers a tough critique of President George W. Bush and the Democratic opposition on the eve of a landmark presidential election and points to a way out of cynicism and defeatism.
With passion, clarity, and humor, E. J. Dionne describes today's political atmosphere as the bitterest he can remember. Never have Democrats been as frustrated by their inability to move the debate. The party of Roosevelt, Kennedy, and Clinton, Dionne says, is lost in pointless feuds, outdated strategies, and old arguments. Democrats have lost track of what they stand for so they don't know what they're fighting for and besides, they've forgotten how to fight back.
In describing how Democrats, moderates, and liberals have failed to match Republicans and conservatives in commitment, resourcefulness, and clarity, Dionne invents what is likely to become a popular parlor game among the politically committed. In "The Wrong Stuff," he lists ten futile arguments big versus small government, for example that Democrats keep having with themselves. "The Right Stuff" focuses on ten arguments they should start making about taxes, business, and the role of government.
Dionne zeroes in on how a floundering Bush administration used September 11 to politicize national security issues for partisan advantage. Enraged but intimidated by ruthless opponents, the Democratic party failed to find its voice on security issues and was soundly beaten in 2002.
Drawing on some lessons from the 2004 primary campaigns, Dionne argues that anger and frustration have in fact awakened progressives to the need for innovation in organizing, in approaching an increasingly conservative media, and in formulating politically useful and plainly stated ideas. Learning from the conservative movement's successes, liberals have begun the work of reconstruction.
The politics of revenge, Dionne argues persuasively, can give way to something better: a progressive patriotism built on hope and optimism about America's role in the world and its capacity to renew social justice at home.
Review
"Balm for those who long to see a revivified-and not-quite-so-spiteful-opposition and a return to Kennedy-era liberalism." Kirkus Reviews
Review
"[A] sound plan for a Democratic takeover of the White House in 2004....Dionne proffers perhaps the most cogent analysis to date of why Democrats have lost the battle to the right, and how they might regain control of the debate." Publishers Weekly
Review
"E. J. finally got mad, and thank God! The author of the seminal Why Americans Hate Politics, which gave Clinton his blueprint for winning the White House in 1992, tells Democrats how to do it again." Al Franken, author of Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them
Review
"Given the zeitgeist down at the old corral, E. J. Dionne has written one of the timeliest political tracts since Tom Paine came out with Common Sense....With E. J. you really get smart analysis, well-informed thinking, and wonderfully commonsensical insight. You do not get a lot of pointless rage, rhetoric, and indignation. It's all in the title, Stand Up Fight Back and don't just flail away fight back smart." Molly Ivins, coauthor of Bushwhacked
Review
"E. J. Dionne's Why Americans Hate Politics revolutionized the campaign of 1992 and helped Bill Clinton crack the code to reach the forgotten middle class. We believe Stand Up Fight Back will do the same for Democrats in 2004. It may be the most important new book of this political season." James Carville and Paul Begala, authors of Buck Up, Suck Up
Review
"Stand Up Fight Back is the book Democrats have been waiting for and Republicans were hoping no one would write. E. J. Dionne, Jr., lays out the rules of engagement for the critical election of 2004." Richard Reeves, author of President Nixon
Review
"Occasionally, a book appears that helps set a more constructive national political agenda. Stand Up Fight Back is a superb critique of our current politics and a wise statement of what will serve the country's future well-being." Robert Dallek, author of An Unfinished Life: John F. Kennedy, 1917-1963
Review
"The man who told us 'Why Americans Hate Politics' is back with a pointed diagnosis for what ails liberals and Democrats, plus a prescription for how we can bridge the gaps between red-state and blue-state Americans." Clarence Page, syndicated columnist, Chicago Tribune
Synopsis
E. J. Dionne describes today's political atmosphere as the bitterest he can remember. Never have Democrats been so frustrated by their inability to move the debate. The party of Roosevelt, Kennedy, and Clinton, Dionne says, is lost in pointless feuds, outdated strategies, and old arguments. Democrats have lost track of what they stand for, so they don't know what they're fighting for, and besodes, they've forgotten how to fight back. Dionne charges that a Bush Administration that was floundering used September 11 to politicize national security issues for partisan advantage. Enraged but intimidated by ruthless opponents, the Democratic Party failed to find its voice on the Iraq War and was soundly beaten in 2002. Can the Democrats find their voices again? Can the politics of revenge give way to something better? Yes, says Dionne, in 2004's essential political book.
Synopsis
Can the Democrats find their voices again? Can the politics of revenge give way to something better? Yes, says Dionne, in 2004's essential political book.
About the Author
E. J. Dionne, Jr., is a bestselling author, a syndicated columnist who appears twice weekly in The Washington Post and nearly a hundred other newspapers, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, and a professor at Georgetown University. His Why Americans Hate Politics won a Los Angeles Times Book Prize and was a nominee for the National Book Award. He is a regular commentator on National Public Radio and on other radio and television programs. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife, Mary Boyle, and their three children.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Divided Against Ourselves: A Letter to Some Friends
1. Put on a Compassionate Face
How an Idea Got Bush Elected and Got Him into Trouble
2. "He's Ours. He's All We've Got"
How 9/11 United Us and Divided Us Again
3. What's Wrong with the Democrats?
4. Talking the Other Guy's Talk
Why Democrats Are Afraid of Their Own Principles
5. We're All in This Together
How the Right Won with the Media, the Think Tanks, and the Loudmouths
6. A Fair Fight
Why Democrats and Liberals Should Stop Being Afraid
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index