One major party in American politics, the Democrats, has consciously identified itself with underdogs. This book analyzes the relationship between the party and the main political ideology of its base: liberalism.Culture and Underdogs: The Endearing Appeal The Political Culture and Core Ideals of Democrats The Founders and the Great Commoner: Jefferson, Jackson and Bryan The Glory Days: FDR to Humphrey The 1970s and 1980s: McGovern, Carter, Hart and Jackson The 1990s to 2004: Bill Clinton, Al Gore and Howard Dean Barack Obama and the Future of the Democratic Party
A must-read for Democrats who can t explain why they are Democrats and Republicans who can t explain why their BIG DOG tactics often lose to UNDERDOGS. This remarkably researched book is essential for educators of today and their students who are the future of America s political system. - Phil Jones, Retired CBS News Correspondent, and Contributing Correspondent, PBS Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly
Trautman s work is a careful analysis of the often-contentious embrace of the underdog by the Democratic Party. Casting itself in this role has resulted historically in opening the party to a wide-variety of differing interests, personalities, and styles. The self-identification of such groups as underdogs places the party under various obligations to contest others in re-establishing a desired condition of relative equality within which the presumed underdog can prosper and imparting a unique character to American liberalism. Throughout, Trautman displays a fine sense for the nuances with which American liberalism is continuously constructed and reconstructed, and illustrates with apt and plentiful examples the complex pathways the American underdog travels in the endless search for achievement and fulfillment. - Deane Neubauer, Emeritus Professor of Political Science, University of Hawaii, Manoa
Karl G. Trautman s The Underdog in American Politics is a thorougl3C