After his unsuccessful attempt to earn the vice presidency in 1956, John F. Kennedy arguably served as a principal strategist, constructing a winning coalition of young campaigners, union members, party bosses, and fellow Catholics, among others. Included in this group of followers was Lou Harris, the first on-staff presidential pollster. Boston Globe journalists Oliphant (Utter Incompetents) and Wilkie (The Fall of the House of Zeus) provide an in-depth narrative based on oral histories, personal interviews, and secondary sources. After campaigning on the Cold War missile gap and a lackluster economy, Kennedy, an inexperienced but persuasive senator from Massachusetts, become U.S. president in 1960. This analytical rather than celebratory work suggests Kennedy's win offers a replicable template of preparing early, securing print bylines and TV advertisements, serving as an agent for change, and quickly responding to verbal attacks. The authors add a new perspective to literature on Kennedy by focusing on his electioneering efforts rather than his persona and policy outcomes.
VERDICT This book will interest everyone from history buffs to those nostalgic for the days of favorite-son candidates to readers interested in contested conventions. [See Prepub Alert, 11/14/16.]
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!