The last Republicans Inside the extraordinary relationship between George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush

Mark K. Updegrove

Book - 2017

"Drawing extensively on exclusive access and interviews with both Bush presidents, Updegrove reveals for the first time their influences and perspectives on each other's presidencies; their views on family, public service, and America's role in the world; and their unvarnished thoughts on Donald Trump, and the radical transformation of the Republican Party he now leads."--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Mark K. Updegrove (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 479 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 411-453) and index.
ISBN
9780062654120
  • Introduction
  • Part I. "I Never Looked Back"
  • Chapter 1. "A Flash of Light"
  • Chapter 2. "Bar"
  • Chapter 3. Go West
  • Chapter 4. "The Sky's the Limit"
  • Chapter 5. "More Than Tongue Can Tell"
  • Chapter 6. Aggravation and Pride
  • Chapter 7. "A certain Sort of Expectation"
  • Part II. "A Debt to Pay"
  • Chapter 8. "To Do Something of Service"
  • Chapter 9. Young and Foolish
  • Chapter 10. "A Whole Different Life"
  • Chapter 11. Up in the Air
  • Chapter 12. "Listen to Your Conscience"
  • Chapter 13. Family Values
  • Chapter 14. Horizons
  • Chapter 15. Go East
  • Chapter 16. Coming Home
  • Chapter 17|"Defeat Isn't Defeat".
  • Part III. Turning Points
  • Chapter 18. "The Big Mo"
  • Chapter 19. The Call from Reagan
  • Chapter 20. A Heartbeat Away
  • Chapter 21. Arbusto or Bust
  • Chapter 22. "Why Don't You Come to Washington?"
  • Chapter 23. Awakening
  • Chapter 24. Junior
  • Chapter 25. "Be Tough"
  • Chapter 26. Not So Kind, Not So Gentle
  • Part IV. 41
  • Chapter 27. "A New Breeze"
  • Chapter 28. "Comfortable in the Job"
  • Chapter 29. A Whole New Ball Game
  • Chapter 30. Commander in CHief
  • Chapter 31. "You Can't Give In"
  • Chapter 32. Coming of Age
  • Chapter 33. "Defeat with Dignity"
  • Chapter 34. "Finish Strong"
  • Part V. "His Turn Now in the Family"
  • Chapter 35. "The L-Word"
  • Chapter 36. Joy and Heartache
  • Chapter 37. "Chart Your Own Course"
  • Chapter 38. "No Turning Back"
  • Chapter 39. Great Expectation
  • Part VI. 43
  • Chapter 40. "Mr. President"
  • Chapter 41. "Shock and Awe"
  • Chapter 42. Mourning in America
  • Chapter 43. Prelude to War
  • Chapter 44. A Broader Battle
  • Chapter 45. 41 and 43
  • Part VII. "The Decider"
  • Chapter 46. To Whom Much Is Given...
  • Chapter 47. "Regards from President Bush"
  • Chapter 48. The Last Campaign
  • Chapter 49. "Brother from Another Mother"
  • Chapter 50. "The First Jewish President"
  • Chapter 51. The Toughest Decision
  • Chapter 52. Last Days
  • Part VIII. The Last Republicans
  • Chapter 53. "It Wasn't Me"
  • Chapter 54. Trumped
  • Chapter 55. "What About George?"
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A thoughtful political biography of two dynasts of a now-receding generation of politicians. The title of historian/journalist Updegrove's (Indomitable Will: LBJ in the Presidency, 2012, etc.) latest comes from George W. Bush's well-documented lament that the rise of Donald Trump meant that he and his father would be the last "real" Republicans to hold the White House. That worry, suggests the author, is well-founded; by his account, the Bushes are definitively establishment figures who, while of much different styles, represented the virtues of prudence, civility, and bipartisanship as leaders of a party that has lately "placed ideological purity over pragmatism and compromise in governance." George W. claims that his brother Jeb's primary defeat at Trump's hands was the result of anger stemming from "a moribund economy." If the anger seems more free-floating and less directed than all that, it certainly would seem that disdain marked Jeb's trouncing in an arena that by all rights he should have dominated. Updegrove discusses the advantages and disadvantages of being a member of a political dynasty in a time when voters seem mistrustful of themand Trump, he observes, upended two of them, the Bushes and the Clintonsnoting that still other Bushes are waiting in the wings for their turns. In the main, this is a solid examination of how the Bushes behaved while in office, the one patrician and the other homespun, the latter much more certain of the righteousness of his cause even after being told by his own mother that he would not prevail in his first run for public office. ("True story," he shrugged, though Barb proved to be wrong.) In the end, George H.W. emerges as a bit warmer and less wooden than he might have seemed during his term as president, while George W. emerges as somewhat more substantial than he is often depicted as being.Capably written and argued, though only the future will tell whether the elegy for the Republican establishment is premature. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.