Over the 200 plus year history of political parties in the US, something our founders advised against, the same parties have, at different times, stood for different sets of ideas. The Federalists, the Whigs, the national Republican Party, the Democrats and others all have been made up of different coalitions at different times
We all know for example that Lincoln and his Republicans were once the anti-slavery party. Oh how that’s changed.
The modern Democratic party really emerged with the New Deal coalition beginning with FDR in 1933. It was an amalgam that was considered the core of American liberalism. It was anchored in ethno-religious constituencies (Catholics, Jews, African Americans,) white Southerners, well-organized labor unions, urban machines, progressive intellectuals, and populist farm groups.
However, like all previous party coalitions, it would begin to splinter. Elements of the once liberal base of the new deal coalition would become part of the Republican party of Nixon and Reagan and Trump.
The story of how this happened is really the story of our modern politics that begins in 1970 and it’s the story that David Paul Kuhn tells in The Hardhat Riot: Nixon, New York City, and the Dawn of the White Working-Class Revolution.
My conversation with David Paul Kuhn:
The Pandemic Profiteers: A Conversation with J. David McSwane
Is Crypto a Libertarian Dream or a Left-Wing Nightmare? A Conversation with Daniel Pinchbeck
A Nostalgia For the Journalism of Old: A Conversation with Brian Karem
Corruption is America’s Operating System: A Conversation with Sarah Chayes
The Battle of Banks Not Tanks: A Conversation with Bill Browder
Recipe for Survival: A Conversation with Dana Ellis Hunnes:
Tell Me A Story: A Conversation with Frank Rose
How Global Migration is Actually Moving the World Forward: My conversation with Parag Kahanna
How Chinese Language is the Core of its Culture: A Conversation with Jing Tsu
A Love Letter to Spy-craft: A Conversation With Retired CIA Officer Douglas London
Politics Without Celebrity - Kati Marton’s The Chancellor
January 6th Was a Rallying Point For White Hot Hate
How Fame, Fortune and Education Ended Objective Journalism: A conversation with Batya Ungar-Sargon
The Modern Era of Television Begins with HBO: A Conversation with James Andrew Miller
The Shattering: America in the 1960‘s: A Conversation with Kevin Boyle
The Post-Pandemic Normal Will Never Be the Way It Was
Has the Death of Faith Made Us More Tribal?
The Rise and Fall of the NRA and What it‘s Cost Us: A Conversation with Tim Mak
China: Enemy or Competitor?
A Story of What Went Right in the Battle Agaisnt COVID - Gregory Zuckerman tells the story of how we got the shot that saved the world
Join Podbean Ads Marketplace and connect with engaged listeners.
Advertise Today
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Jim & Bill (It‘s Another Day)
HauntingLive
Dr. Paul’s Worldviews
The Ben Shapiro Show
Morning Wire