In
Wrong on Race, Bruce Bartlett sets the record
straight on a hidden past that many Democrats would rather
see swept under the carpet. Ranging from the founding of
the Republic through to today, it rectifies the unfair perceptions
of America's two national parties. While Nixon's infamous
"Southern Strategy" is constantly referenced in
the media, less well remembered are Woodrow Wilson's segregation
of the entire Federal civil service; FDR's appointment of
a member of the KKK to the Supreme Court; John F. Kennedy's
apathy towards civil rights legislation; and the ascension
of Robert Byrd, who is current President pro tempore of
the Senate, third in line in the presidential line of succession,
and a former member of the KKK.
For the last seventy years, African Americans have voted
en masse for one party, with little in the end to show for
it. Is it time for the pendulum to swing the other way?
With the Republican Party furiously engaged in pre-2008
soul searching, this exhaustively researched, incisively
written exposé will be an important and compelling
component of that debate as we head towards November. |