''The Crusader ''tells the fascinating life story of
Pat Buchanan, the three-time presidential candidate,
Nixon confidant, White House communications director
during Iran-Contra, pundit, and bestselling
author.Buchanan is one of America's most controversial
conservative rebels. After serving Nixon and Reagan, he
led a revolt against the Republican establishment that
was a forerunner for the Tea Party. In 1992 he tried to
take away his party's nomination from the incumbent
president, George H. W. Bush. Although he lost, Buchanan
set the tone for political debate for the next two
decades when he declared a ''cultural war'' against
liberalism and a jihad on Republican moderates.
Throughout the 1990s, his radical, rollicking
presidential campaigns tore apart the GOP and
articulated the hopes and fears of a new generation of
Middle American conservatives. This balanced, and often
funny, biography explores the highs and lows of
Buchanan's career, from his stunning victory in the 1996
New Hampshire primary to his humiliating ''grudge
match'' against Donald Trump in the 2000 Reform Party
contest. At its heart is a man who embodies the
contradictions of the conservative movement: a wealthy
bookworm who branded himself as an everyman reactionary,
a Republican insider who became a populist outsider, a
patriarch whose campaigns were directed by his sister, a
socially unacceptable ideologue who won the affection of
liberals and conservatives alike--Rachel Maddow, Ralph
Nader, Eugene McCarthy, Ron Paul, even Mel
Gibson.Timothy Stanley tells the intimate story of the
man who defined the culture war for a generation of
Americans with outrage and wit; the man who, when asked
what he thought about gun control, replied, ''I think
it's important to have a steady aim.'' |
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