The great suppression
voting rights, corporate cash, and the conservative assault on democracy
First edition.
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Word Count
61,500 words, Guess
Page Count
246 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-10110190576X
- ISBN-101101905778
- ISBN-139781101905760
- ISBN-139781101905777
- Library of Congress Control Number2016003489
and 3 more
- OCLC Control Number945169857
- Better World Books9781101905760
- Open LibraryOL27213604M
Classifications
- DDC320.520973
- LCCJC573.2.U6 R67 2016
- LCCJC573.2.U6R67 2016
Description
"A deeply reported look inside the new conservative movement working to undermine American democracy. Control of the country is up for grabs--and Republicans have been rigging the game in their favor. Twenty-two states have passed restrictions on voting. Ruthless gerrymandering has given the GOP a long-term grip on Congress. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has eviscerated campaign finance laws, boosting candidates backed by big money. It would be worrying enough if these were just schemes for partisan advantage. But the reality is even more disturbing. As reporter Zachary Roth reveals, a growing number of Republicans distrust the very idea of democracy--and they're doing everything they can to limit it. In The Great Suppression, Roth unearths the deep historical roots of this anti-egalitarian worldview, and introduces us to its modern-day proponents: The GOP officials pushing to make it harder to cast a ballot; the lawyers looking to scrap all limits on money in politics; the libertarian scholars reclaiming judicial activism to roll back the New Deal; and the corporate lobbyists working to ban local action on everything from the minimum wage to the environment. And he travels from Rust Belt cities to southern towns to show us how these efforts are hurting the most vulnerable Americans and preventing progress on pressing issues. A sharp, searing polemic in the tradition of Rachel Maddow and Matt Taibbi, The Great Suppressionis an urgent wake-up call about a threat to our most cherished values, and a rousing argument for why we need democracy now more than ever"--
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