The Guardian (USA)

Democracy Awakening review: Heather Cox Richardson’s necessary US history

- Charles Kaiser Democracy Awakening is published in the US by Viking

In a media landscape so polluted by politician­s addicted to cheap thrills (Matt Gaetz, Marjorie Taylor Greene, the Orange Monster) and the pundits addicted to them (Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Steve Bannon), the success of Heather Cox Richardson is much more than a blast of fresh air. It’s a bona fide miracle.

The Boston College history professor started writing her newsletter, Letters from an American, almost four years ago. Today her daily dose of common sense about the day’s news, wrapped in an elegant package of American history, has a remarkable 1.2 million subscriber­s, making her the most popular writer on Substack. Not since Edward P Morgan captivated the liberal elite with his nightly 15-minute broadcasts in the 1960s has one pundit been so important to so many progressiv­e Americans at once.

In the age of social media, Richardson’s success is counterint­uitive. When she was profiled by Ben Smith in the New York Times a couple of years ago, Smith confessed he was so addicted to Twitter he rarely found the time to open her “rich summaries” of the news. When he told Bill Moyers, one of Richardson’s earliest promoters, the same thing, the great commentato­r explained: “You live in a world of thundersto­rms, and she watches the waves come in.”

Richardson’s latest book shares all the intelligen­ce of her newsletter. It doesn’t have the news value of her internet contributi­ons but it is an excellent primer for anyone who needs the important facts of the last 150 years of American history – and how they got us to the sorry place we inhabit today.

Like other recent books, including The Destructio­nists by Dana Milbank, Richardson’s new volume reminds us that far from being an outlier, Donald Trump was inevitable after 70 years of Republican pandering to big business, racism and Christian nationalis­m.

So many direct lines can be drawn from the dawn of modern conservati­sm to the insanity of the Freedom Caucus today. It was William F Buckley Jr, the most famous conservati­ve pundit of his era, who in 1951 attacked universiti­es for teaching “secularism and collectivi­sm” and promoted the canard that liberals were basically communists. Among Buckley’s mortal enemies, Richardson writes, were everyone “who believed that the government should regulate business, protect social welfare, promote infrastruc­ture and protect civil rights” – and who “believed in fact-based argument”.

In place of the liberal consensus that emerged with Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal, Buckley and his henchmen wanted a new “orthodoxy of religion and the ideology of free markets”. A few years later, the Republican presidenti­al nominee Barry Goldwater ran on a platform opposing the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Four years after that, Richard Nixon’s Southern Strategy included promises to slow down the desegregat­ion the supreme court had ordered 14 years before.

In one of the most notorious dog whistles of all time, Ronald Reagan began his 1980 presidenti­al campaign by declaring his love for states’ rights in Philadelph­ia, Mississipp­i – made infamous by the murders of the civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner in 1964.

Since the 1950s, Richardson writes, conservati­ves have fought to destroy “the active government of the liberal consensus, and since the 1980s, Republican politician­s [have] hacked away at it” but still “left much of the government intact”. With Trump’s election in 2016, the nation had finally “put into office a president who would use his power to destroy it”. Republican­s fought for 50 years for an “end to business regulation and social services and the taxes they required”. Trump went even further by “making the leap from oligarchy to authoritar­ianism”.

Richardson is refreshing­ly direct about the importance of the fascist example to Trump and his Maga movement. When he used the White House to host the Republican convention in 2020, the first lady, Melania Trump, wore a “dress that evoked a Nazi uniform”. And, Richardson writes, the big lie was a “key propaganda tool” for the Nazis, which Hitler himself explained in Mein Kampf, the book Trump may have kept on his night table at Trump Tower (or maybe it was a collection of Hitler’s speeches).

Richardson even uses the psychologi­cal profile of Hitler by the Office of Strategic Services, the US intelligen­ce agency during the second world war, to remind us of similariti­es to Trump. The OSS said Hitler’s “primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy … never accept blame; concentrat­e on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong”.

But Richardson’s book isn’t just a recitation of the evil of Republican­s. It is also a celebratio­n of progressiv­e successes. She reminds us that before Vietnam ruined his presidency, Lyndon Johnson compiled an incredible record. In one session, Congress passed an astonishin­g 84 laws. Johnson’s “Great Society” included the Voting Rights Act of 1965; the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, which provided federal aid for public schools; launched Head Start for the early education of low-income children; the social security amendments that created Medicare; increased welfare payments; rent subsidies; the Water Quality Act of 1965; and the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

These laws had a measurable impact. “Forty million Americans were poor in 1960”; by 1969, that had dropped to 24 million.

Addressing graduates of the University of Michigan in 1964, Johnson used words that are apt today:“For better or worse, your generation has been appointed by history to … lead America toward a new age … You can help build a society where the demands of morality, and the needs of the spirit, can be realized in the life of the nation.”

Johnson rejected the “timid souls” who believed “we are condemned to a soulless wealth. We have the power to shape the civilizati­on that we want. But we need your will, your labor, your hearts, if we are to build that kind of society.”

 ?? Shannon Stapleton/Reuters ?? US and Confederat­e flags outside the Capitol in Washington on 6 January 2021. Photograph:
Shannon Stapleton/Reuters US and Confederat­e flags outside the Capitol in Washington on 6 January 2021. Photograph:
 ?? Archive (WPA)/Alamy ?? Heather Cox Richardson interviews Joe Biden in 2022. Photograph: World Politics
Archive (WPA)/Alamy Heather Cox Richardson interviews Joe Biden in 2022. Photograph: World Politics

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