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ID133641
Title ProperPerlstein's bridge to nowhere
LanguageENG
AuthorKabaservice, Geoffrey
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)A simplistic attempt to explain the rise of the modern American right
ON A SWELTERING Monday in August 1976, delegates began to arrive at the Kemper Arena in Kansas City, Missouri, for the start of the Republican National Convention. Unlike today's tightly scripted party conventions, which have become little more than four-day infomercials, the outcome of this convention was in serious doubt. The presumptive nominee was President Gerald Ford, who had assumed the office only after the resignations of Spiro Agnew and Richard M. Nixon. His challenger was Ronald Reagan, the conservative former governor of California, who could seize the presidential nomination by winning over a comparative handful of uncommitted delegates. It was a moment of high and historic drama. As Rick Perlstein relates, when the delegates arrived at the arena, they were to be greeted by "what was supposed to be a stirring sight": a fifty-foot, 1,500-pound inflated elephant soaring overhead. Unfortunately, in "classic 1970s fashion," the beast's stomach had been accidentally punctured by its rigging and it now wallowed limply in the parking lot.
`In' analytical NoteNational Interest Vol. No.133; Sep-Oct.2014: p.89-96
Journal SourceNational Interest Vol. No.133; Sep-Oct.2014: p.89-96
Key WordsUnited States - US ;  Modern American Rights - MAR ;  Political Rise ;  Kemper Arena ;  Historic Drama ;  Gerald Ford ;  Republican National Convention ;  Richard M. Nixon ;  Ronald Reagan