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St. Augustine's Press |
The
story of New York's feisty Conservative Party is really the saga of America's
tumultuous political maturity. Born in response to the rise of Nelson Rockefeller's
liberal Republicanism, the New York's Conservative Party has grown to become
the nation's most successful third party. It has also turned out to be its
political conscience. The Conservative Party's founders understood that their mission was primarily to keep the Republicans honest; to ensure that there was room in New York's GOP for conservatives and conservatism. They knew this meant that some Republican candidates who sought the Conservative endorsement might flourish and others who shunned it might founder, and this is exactly what happened. But throughout its forty-year history, the Party has stuck to its principles as much as it has played politics. In vivid and often amusing detail, Mr. Marlin gives us an insider's view of: The derailing of Rockefeller's presidential freight train. William F. Buckley Jr.'s race for mayor of New York City in 1965. The Conservative Party's battles with John Lindsay in the late Sixties. The senatorial victory of Conservative James Buckley in 1970. The Conservative response to New York City's fiscal crisis. The Party's love-hate relationship with Rudy Giuliani. |
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| Fighting
the Good Fight A History of the New York Conservative Party Introduction by Richard Brookhiser 400 pages, introduction, notes, bibliography, appendices, index 6" x 9" Cloth ISBN: 1-58731-251-4 $28.00 |