The candid, behind-the-scenes memoir of the of the Senate Majority Leader and GOP veteran.
In October 1984, a hard-charging Kentucky politician waited excitedly for President Ronald Reagan to arrive at a presidential rally in Louisville. In the midst of a tough Senate campaign against an incumbent Democrat, the young Republican hoped Reagan’s endorsement would give a much-needed boost to his insurgent campaign. He even had a camera crew ready to capture the president’s words for a TV commercial he planned to air during the campaign’s final stretch. Alas, when Reagan finally stepped to the microphone, he smiled for the crowd and declared: “I’m happy to be here with my good friend, Mitch O’Donnell.”
That was hardly Mitch McConnell’s first setback, and far from his last. He swallowed hard, put his head down, and kept going. Four weeks later, in the biggest upset of the year, his dream of being a US senator came true—by a margin of about one vote per precinct. By persevering, he’d be the only Republican in the country to beat an incumbent Democratic US senator.
McConnell learned patience and fortitude during his post–World War II youth in Alabama. His mother helped him beat polio by leading him through long, aching exercises every day for two years. His father taught him the importance of standing up to bullies, even if it meant taking the occasional punch. It turned out to be the perfect childhood for a future Senate majority leader. “In the line of work I would choose, compromise is key, but I’d come to find that certain times required me to invoke the fighting spirit both of my parents instilled in me.”
For more than three decades, McConnell has worked steadily to advance conservative values, including limited government, individual liberty, fiscal prudence, and a strong national defense. But he has always cared much more about moving the ball forward than about who gets the credit.
Now McConnell reveals what he really thinks about the rivalry between the Senate and the House; the players and the stakes involved when a group of political opportunists tried to hijack the Tea Party movement; and key figures such as Barack Obama, Joe Biden, and Harry Reid. He explains the real causes of the chronic gridlock that has so many voters enraged, his ongoing efforts to restore the US Senate’s indispensable dual role as a brake on excess and a tool for national consensus, and what ordinary citizens have a right to expect from Washington.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
May 31, 2016 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
- ISBN: 9780399564123
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780399564123
- File size: 6443 KB
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780399564123
- File size: 7322 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
The Senate majority leader bares all--well, at least his fangs--in this account of a long career on Capitol Hill.The long game: it's a metaphor for life as well as politics. If one were not aware of McConnell's actual performance in office, this modest memoir would be a source of Solomonic wisdom for politicians and good citizens everywhere--as, for example, when he details his opposition to a flag-burning amendment to the nation's founding document, arguing that "no act of speech is so obnoxious that it merits tampering with the First Amendment," and as when he urges bipartisanship, saying, "I believe that consensus among bitterly disputing parties is not only possible but a necessary condition for the tranquil flourishing we aspire to as a people." Deliberative moments of this sort are fewer, though, than score-settling and scattershot complaints. Allowing that he's usually portrayed as the villain of the piece, he has scarcely typed his name before lighting into his Democratic counterpart, Harry Reid, under whose leadership "the Senate Chamber frequently became little more than a Democratic campaign studio." Thus it has always been, and thus it is now, but no matter: McConnell goes on to rehearse lengthily his hatred of the Affordable Care Act and fury over the party-line vote that brought it about, to say nothing of his dislike for the president and the "march of the Left" generally. Even with its affecting glimpses into real life--his overcoming polio as a child, for instance--McConnell's book is too much an exercise in finger-pointing: the Democrats are "more rigorous about enforcing a rigid ideological code than Republicans," those who opposed the Iraq War were "reckless," and so forth. Lauding the Senate as a tool of moderation and wise counsel is one thing, behaving moderately and wisely another. More examples of such exemplary conduct would have been welcome in the place of the litany of grumbles. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
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