Fools on the Hill The hooligans, saboteurs, conspiracy theorists, and dunces who burned down the house

Dana Milbank

Book - 2024

When Republicans took control of the House in the 2022 midterm elections with a historically slim majority, mayhem began immediately. "Failed completely." "Can't govern." "Broken." "Lunatics." "Embarrassing." "Bunch of idiots." And that's how House Republicans described themselves. Take it from Marjorie Taylor Greene, who said in May 2024 that "many Americans in general are sick and tired and fed up with a feckless, useless Republican Party, a conference that does nothing." This is the House of George Santos and Jim Jordan, of Lauren Boebert and Matt Gaetz. They investigated space aliens and Hunter Biden's art dealer. They punched and they groped. They cham...pioned Confederates and insurrectionists--while disparaging the military and sabotaging the economy. They tied up the House so often with far-right fantasies that they produced what was arguably the least effective session of Congress in history. Dana Milbank spent a year reporting from inside the Capitol, watching the circus from the front row. The result, Fools on the Hill, is simultaneously horrifying and laugh-out-loud funny. Sadly, it is all true. --

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Published
New York, NY : Little, Brown, and Company 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Dana Milbank (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 384 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 347-374) and index.
ISBN
9780316570923
  • Prologue
  • Part I. Disinformation
  • Chapter 1. "An Absolute Disaster for the Republican Party"
  • Chapter 2. "Voting for the Craziest Son of a Bitch in the Race"
  • Chapter 3. "Look, There's a Lot of Frauds in Congress. I Mean, George Santos Is the Least of This Country's Worries"
  • Part II. Dysfunction
  • Chapter 4. "A Speaker Has Not Been Elected"
  • Chapter 5. "What a Turd Sandwich This 'Deal' Is"
  • Chapter 6. "This Place Is Crazier Than Usual"
  • Chapter 7. "The Dysfunction Caucus at Work"
  • Chapter 8. "Let's Get Our Poop in a Group, People. We've Got to Figure This Out"
  • Chapter 9. "It's the Same Clown Car with a Different Driver"
  • Part III. Disunion
  • Chapter 10. "My Opinion of a White Nationalist, If Someone Wants to Call Them White Nationalist, to Me, Is an American"
  • Chapter 11. "Well, Unfortunately, We Can't Track Down the Informant"
  • Chapter 12. "This Is What's Known as Luna-cy"
  • Chapter 13. "We Need a National Divorce"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A Republican majority dominated by MAGA zealots has made the House of Representatives a cesspool of "incompetence," "chaos," savage infighting, and racism, according to this jaundiced history of the 118th Congress. Washington Post columnist Milbank (The Destructionists) calls the current House session "the most ineffective... in nearly a century," with no significant legislative accomplishments but plenty of pernicious right-wing distractions. These include vicious battles over the House speakership that forced speakers Kevin McCarthy and Mike Johnson to bend to the far-right's demands, which brought the government close to defaulting on the national debt; a fixation on "culture war" issues like transgender athletes in women's sports; efforts to impeach President Biden and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas despite there being no crimes to charge them with; and endless investigations of trumped-up controversies from Hunter Biden's laptop to allegations that the Pentagon is covering up the presence of extraterrestrials. Milbank paints a lurid group portrait of congressional Republicans as a menagerie of liars and reprobates (New York congressman George Santos is the champion here) and ably skewers the party's crazy rhetoric, feckless wrangling, and sheer tawdriness. More invective than analysis, this recap of conservative absurdities and outrages will galvanize Milbank's liberal readership. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An up-close look at the "clown show" of right-wing extremists who continue to fail to govern in Congress.Washington Post columnist Milbank, a veteran Capitol Hill observer and author ofThe Deconstructionists andO Is for Obama, resolved to limit his journalistic focus to the House of Representatives. His weekly essays from 2023 to early 2024 form the basis of this collection, enhanced by additional reporting, analysis, and context. The author presents the chaos, incompetence, and self-created crises in the House in three parts: Disinformation, Dysfunction, and Disunion. He explains how GOP gerrymandering created House seats from uncompetitive districts, enabling the "craziest SOBs" to hold the balance of power. Anyone following the past two years of national news will remember the lowlights: Kevin McCarthy's path to the Speakership over 15 ballots and capitulation to the "fringiest elements of the right wing"; the near-default on the federal debt, "playing chicken with the American economy"; threats of government shutdown; the only speaker ousted in U.S. history; and the resulting three-week "free-for-all" search for a new speaker. Election denier Mike Johnson has created his own record of failure and dysfunction, killing a bipartisan border deal and endangering U.S. aid to Ukraine and Israel. Much else from this dismal era of congressional misrule will be familiar to citizens who have been paying attention: national leaders legitimizing white nationalism and demonizing immigrants, or the obsessive impeachment inquiry into Joe Biden without "a shred of evidence." Milbank brings useful detail and nuance to his portrait of this broken political system. For example, we learn that Matt Gaetz left a draft of his "Motion to Vacate" the Speaker on a changing table in a Capitol restroom and that Marjorie Taylor Greene thought "indictable crimes" was pronounced "indicktable." Clear revelations about how abuse of congressional power and political dysfunction have never been so egregious. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.