No Right Turn: Conservative Politics in a Liberal America
Few question the âeoeright turnâe#157; America took after 1966, when liberal political power began to wane. But if they did, No Right Turn suggests, they might discover that all was not really âeoerightâe#157; with the conservative golden age. A provocative overview of a half century of American politics, the book takes a hard look at the counterrevolutionary dreams of liberalismâe(tm)s enemiesâe"to overturn peopleâe(tm)s reliance on expanding government, reverse the moral and sexual revolutions, and win the Culture Warâe"and finds them largely unfulfilled.
David Courtwright deftly profiles celebrated and controversial figures, from Clare Booth Luce, Barry Goldwater, and the Kennedy brothers to Jerry Falwell, David Stockman, and Lee Atwater. He shows us Richard Nixonâe(tm)s keen talent for turning popular anxieties about morality and federal meddling to Republican advantageâe"and his inability to translate this advantage into reactionary policies. Corporate interests, boomer lifestyles, and the media weighed heavily against Nixon and his successors, who placated their base with high-profile attacks on crime, drugs, and welfare dependency. Meanwhile, religious conservatives floundered on abortion and school prayer, obscenity, gay rights, and legalized vices like gambling, and fiscal conservatives watched in dismay as the bills mounted.
We see how President Reaganâe(tm)s mélange of big government, strong defense, lower taxes, higher deficits, mass imprisonment, and patriotic symbolism proved an illusory form of conservatism. Ultimately, conservatives themselves rebelled against George W. Bushâe(tm)s profligate brand of Reaganism. Courtwrightâe(tm)s account is both surprising and compelling, a bracing argument against some of our most cherished clichés about recent American history.