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The Machine

A Field Guide to the Resurgent Right

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Before Barack Obama had even taken the oath of office after his historic victory, cadres of lobbyists, political hacks, oil tycoons, and right-wing politicians met to plan his political demise. The massive conservative infrastructure created by business groups beginning in the 1970s would not be sufficient, they concluded: in the age of Obama, something new—and bold—had to be done.
Written by the blogger who was the first to report on the lobbyists who brought us the Tea Parties, here is a groundbreaking exposé of the plans to make America conservative again. A Field Guide to the Right dissects the rise of "patriot" hate groups, touches on the role of New York City's most celebrated billionaire in financing the fodder for Glenn Beck and Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, and exposes how former Bush operatives and current trade association heads have cleverly adapted to crush Obama and progressive reform.
For anyone interested in comprehending the new landscape of the conservative movement, here is an essential guide to the people, the money, and the strategies that make it tick.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 15, 2013
      In his first book, Fang, a contributing writer at The Nation, takes a detailed, dizzying look into the movers and shakers essential to reshaping both conservatism and the Republican Party in the wake of President Obama's first term. As the Right attempts to rebrand itself in the wake of Obama's re-election, Fang traces the Tea Party's coalescence into a headline-grabbing monolith that pushed out the Democratic majorityâand the moderate wing of the Republican Partyâin the 2010 midterm elections. The movement "provided a proxy for voters disgusted with the Republican Party's track record to still vote for the GOP," by manipulating Americans, in part, with the call to the proto-revolutionary act its name symbolized. But Fang's core premise is how absolute the corporate influence is throughout the Republican Party. The 2010 Supreme Court decision in Citizens United allowed "corporations and unions to spend unlimited amounts on electioneering"; funneling astronomical amounts of money into front-groups designed to convince Americans to voting against their own self-interests. Fang offers little in answering what can be done to counter corporate power and influence, but his research will motivate readers to question the influences behind political movements.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2013
      Nation contributor Fang debuts with this introduction to the leadership of the contemporary conservative movement, survey of its organizational forms and tactics, and classification of its different sections, by function and area of activity. The author presents a movement split between two parts--the religious fundamentalist wing and its libertarian counterpart--with two sources of tactical leadership, organized around weekly coalition-type meetings in the nation's capital. There is the group associated with Grover Norquist and his tax resisters, while the other identifies with the late New Right leader Paul Weyrich of the Heritage Foundation. Fang reviews both the public and behind-the-scenes influences of organizations like FreedomWorks, the Heritage Foundation and the Council for National Policy, as well as funding influences like the Koch brothers. In the process, he documents how front groups and single-issue formations have been spawned and their activities funded and coordinated. Fang identifies the Heritage Foundation as "still the center of conservatism" and finds the roots of the present radicalism on the right in the opponents of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal. He shows how Koch family members, involved in founding the John Birch Society, continue to play a multigenerational role. Fang insists that today's movement, along with its corporate sponsors, are usurpers of the tradition associated with the original tea party, which was directed against government-subsidized efforts to undermine domestic and international competitors. Funding, media, Internet and other elements are all coordinated in ways some participants probably don't understand at all. A practical addition to literature on conservatism that will be widely appreciated, not just on the left.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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