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- Frank & Al: FDR, Al Smith, and the Unlikely Alliance that Created the Modern Democratic Party by Terry Golway
Frank & Al: FDR, Al Smith, and the Unlikely Alliance that Created the Modern Democratic Party by Terry Golway
Frank & Al: FDR, Al Smith, and the Unlikely Alliance that Created the Modern Democratic Party by Terry Golway
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the Democratic Party was bitterly split between its urban machines -- representing Catholics and Jews, ironworkers and seamstresses from the tenements of the Northeast and Midwest -- and its populists and patricians, rooted in the soil and the Scriptures, enforcers of cultural, political, and religious norms. The chasm between the two factions seemed unbridgeable. But just before the Roaring Twenties, Al Smith, a proud son of the Tammany Hall political machine, and Franklin Roosevelt, a country squire, formed an unlikely alliance that transformed the Democratic Party. Smith and FDR dominated politics in the most powerful state in the union for a quarter century, and in 1932 they ran against each other for the Democratic presidential nomination, setting off one of the great feuds in American history.
This unlikely political partnership finally gets its due in Frank and Al. It was Roosevelt who once said that everything he sought to do in the New Deal had been done in New York under Al Smith when he was governor in the 1920s. It was Smith who persuaded a reluctant Roosevelt to run for governor in 1928, setting the stage for FDR's dramatic comeback after contracting polio in 1921. They took their party, and American politics, out of the nineteenth century and created a place in civil life for the New America of the twentieth century.
St. Martin's Press, Hardcover, 1st Edition, 1st Printing, 2018
THIS IS A BRAND NEW BOOK. THERE IS A BLACK "CLOSEOUT/REMAINDER" MARK ON THE TOP PAGE EDGES.