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Against the Tide: How a Compliant Congress Empowered a Reckless President

Against the Tide: How a Compliant Congress Empowered a Reckless President

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Author: Lincoln Chafee
Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $12.99
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 2 reviews
Sales Rank: 42069

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.8 x 1.2

ISBN: 0312383045
Dewey Decimal Number: 328.73092
EAN: 9780312383046
ASIN: 0312383045

Publication Date: April 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Against the Tide: How a Compliant Congress Empowered a Reckless President

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In this smart, candid, and surprising political memoir, Lincoln Chafee offers a behind-the-scenes look at the first six years of the Bush Administration from the vantage point of one of the few Republican moderates in the Senate.
When Senator Chafee (R-RI) went to Washington, he encountered a Republican Party drifting so far to the right it no longer stood for the mainstream principles that united Americans. Instead, under the direction of George W. Bush, the Party had fallen victim to extremism. In the face of this trend, Chafee stood fast as one of the most liberal Republicans in the Senate, seeking to cut across partisan lines at the very time that they threatened to irrevocably divide the nation.
A political iconoclast, Chafee was the only Republican senator to have expressed support for same-sex marriage; the only Republican to vote in favor of reinstating the top federal tax rate on upper-income payers; the only Republican in the Senate to have voted against authorization of the use of force in Iraq; the only Republican to vote for the Levin-Reed amendment calling for a nonbinding timetable for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq; and the only Republican to vote against Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito. Chafee favored increased federal funding for health care, supported affirmative action and gun control, supported women’s reproductive rights, and endorsed federal funding for embryonic stem cell research. Sometimes referred to by conservatives as a RINO (Republican in Name Only), Chafee turns the tables on the right and asks why it has enabled Bush Jr. to pull the GOP and the nation away from traditional principles of fiscal conservatism, respect for our environment, and aversion to foreign entanglements.
Unabashedly frank, Chafee’s memoir recounts his political journey from small-town mayor to a voice crying from the congressional wilderness. He offers a forward-looking assessment of what comes next for the Republican and Democratic parties, and he also addresses the potential rise of a third party within the void created by bipartisan extremism. Most important, Chafee sounds a wake-up call to his Party, and to all Americans, by challenging our government to strive, as Abraham Lincoln once articulated, “to elevate the condition of men.”




Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars A GOP wake-up call likely to go unheeded from an honorable man   April 21, 2008
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

Former Rhode Island U.S. Senator Lincoln has words of wisdom for both Republicans and Democrats alike, but mainly Republicans, in this thoughtful book.

To illustrate the fact that he is straight-spoken, I take this anecdote from page 183, in light of his Senate vote against a flag-desecration amendment in the late summer of 2006, an amendment thrown up as election fodder.

"In my opinion, some members of Congress desecrated the flag every day by wearing flag pins on their lapels while voting to divide Americans and restrict freedom. ... Using the flag for political gain was the real desecration."

Chafee has a closely reasoned takedown argument for his former Republican colleagues in the Senate, for candidates who would follow the Bush-Rove method of campaigning and more: The game is up.

Chafee, one of six Republicans who lost their Senate seats in 2006, repeated this message inside the GOP caucus long before that. And, he meant it as someone who was still trying to save the Republican Party from itself.

He says he considered running as an independent in 2006, but just couldn't do that.

Now, out of office, though, he is encouraging the idea of a centrist middle to take the third-party road, if needed. This is the one biggest shortcoming of the book.

As a left-liberal who has voted third-parties in the past, I know the Constitutional system is rigged against them, unless one or the other of the major parties is in a time of turmoil. That last happened in the 1850s, when the Whigs shattered over the Compromise of 1850 and then the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

Beyond that, outside apparatchiks like the Grover Norquists of the policy world and insiders, whether elected officials or strategists, will insist in maintaining GOP "message rigidity" enough that, while the party may shrink, it won't explode or implode.

But, Chafee is committed to the idea, perhaps even idealistic about it, so I won't hold that against him.

At the same time, with wistfulness, he recognizes his father's GOP is no more, and Humpty Dumpty can't put it back together. The former "Rockefeller Republicans" are lost; it is on them, and centrist-to-conservative Democrats, that Chafee appears to pin his third-party hopes.

Otherwise, Chafee struck me as someone who actually brought two crucial things to his job as a senator: Due diligence and curiosity beyond accepting spouted platitudes.

That's clear in his descriptions of his dealings with President Bush, Vice President Cheney, John Negroponte when he was ambassador to Iraq, Paul Wolfowitz and others.

For Democrats, his biggest take is continued hypocrisy on the Iraq war. That includes pro-war voters like Harry Reid and Hillary Clinton visiting the state to campaign against him in 2006.

And as for his opponent, now-Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse? Whether due to sour grapes or what, Chafee says Whitehouse had no cojones when he was a U.S. Attorney.

Finally, for both Republicans and Democrats, he says we need a real Middle East peace process, and one that does not write blank checks to Israel.

As a sidebar, I found it interesting that this son of a U.S. Senator worked for years as a horseshoer, in very much an "everyday" job. In short, contrary to the claims about a ranting tyrant from Crawford, Texas, you might actually want to sit down for a beer, a diet Coke, or whatever, with Lincoln Chafee.



4 out of 5 stars The one who wasn't a lemming.   April 11, 2008
 10 out of 10 found this review helpful

Senator Lincoln Chafee was the only Republican senator to vote against President Bush's wish to go to war with Iraq. That, in and of itself, makes him highly unusual and worth listening to. However, Chafee also describes what he calls George W. Bush's "mendacity," Bush's willingness to completely reverse himself on almost every major platform he ran on. Bush ran to be a uniter, but, in fact, was divider. Even without the enormous expense of the war in Iraq, Bush and Cheney rammed through the congress their $1.6 trillion tax cut, which Chafee informs us, was done, to drive the country into debt so that social programs could be cut. Bush/Cheney reversed their stance on trying to clean up the environment and thereby placed former Governor Christie Todd Whitman, who became their head of the EPA, in an untenable position. Most chilling, Chafee reports that his fellow Republicans let out a hoot of support when Bush/Cheney decided to essentially eliminate pollution controls on corporate polluters. The question is why? Why would any senator want to support the idea of helping industry continue to pollute the environment?
Senator Chafee, echoing the sentiments of a granddaughter of Dwight D. Eisenhower, makes it quite clear that Bush/Cheney abandoned completely the precepts of the Republican party: fiscal responsibility, a humble foreign policy and Teddy Roosevelt's and Richard Nixon's legacy of being careful stewards of the environment. Chafee also makes it stunningly clear that Dick Cheney was an obdurate bully who insisted on getting everything he wanted, including a war in Iraq, even though his agenda was not at all a traditional Republican agenda. Bush/Cheney had no qualms about sending our soldiers out to sacrifice, get wounded or die in an essentially insane war of choice, but they also unbelievably robbed the till so that the rich could increase their wealth all at the cost of driving up the country's debt to amounts unprecedented at the same time. Yet, Chafee also explains how puny the Democrats were. How could anybody who knows history support a war in a country with such deep ethnic hatreds between three groups, the ruling Sunnis who were in the minority, the Kurds in the north and the majority Shiites? Trying to bring a democracy to that mix insures discord. Senator Chafee does explain how his fellow Republican Senator Jeffords dropped out of the party after the president dissed him. This resulted in a sea change of power, with the majority being returned to the Democrats. Since Bush/Cheney were planning on going to war in Iraq, how could they succeed if they lost the balance of power in the Senate? Little did they know how easily such democrats as John Kerry, Chris Dodd, John Edwards and Hillary Clinton would capitulate. They couldn't imagine it. To insure victory, they needed to gain back the majority in the 2002 election. Fortunately for them the biggest anti-war senator, Paul Wellstone, was killed in a plane crash. Chafee doesn't mention it, but lays the groundwork for coming to the obvious potential conclusion that Wellstone's death was not at all an accident. A country was planning on going to war, and he stood in the way.
Missing from the story is Al Gore who warned the country about going to war in Iraq in December of 2001. He said: DON'T DO IT. Also missing was the mass rallies to stop the insanity, such as 400,000 protestors in New York City the day the war began, and something like 6 million worldwide also in the protest. Chafee also misses a huge opportunity to explain precisely why the war in Iraq was such a stupid move for the country. After 911, the whole world was unified against bin Laden and his small band of arch-villains. People from 90 countries were killed in the World Trade Center. We had a common enemy and the sentiments of the world on our side. At the same time, the world was also united against Saddam Hussein and inspectors continued to look for WMD in his country. When we went to war, we opposed France, Germany, the Soviet Union and China, all who warned us not to go to war. Further, the war was illegal, as Saddam Hussein had not attacked our country. In fact, he hadn't attacked any country. He had been crippled from the last war, and we had a no fly zone along the top half of his country. He was no threat even if he had WMD. Senator Chafee is to be commended for writing an important and personal account of how, virtually alone, he tried to keep his head about him when all the rest were losing theirs. It is a very sad comment that the head of Halliburton, a company whose profits rose over 900% after we went to war, under the guise of supposedly being a Republican, used the coffers of our country to pay off his buddies and get Democrats as well as Republicans to lick his boots at his say so.
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