Dead center In defense of common sense

Joe Manchin, 1947-

Book - 2025

"A memoir--and a manifesto--like no other, by a true maverick in American politics. With a foreword by Nick Saban. Dead Center: It is where Senator Joe Manchin III has stood his entire life. For him, it's where the real solutions lie, if we are ever going to tame the anger, bitterness, intolerance, and tribalism that have infected our political system. Through 43 years in politics, and 15 years in the Senate, Joe Manchin has stayed close to his roots, basing his principles in when, where, and how he was raised. Treat people with respect. Find dignity in work. Put people first and country before party. Be fiscally responsible and socially compassionate. Only vote for what you understand and can explain to your constituents. That�...39;s it. Dead Center is more than Senator Manchin's declaration of independence from the extremes on both sides. In this revealing and entertaining memoir, Senator Manchin combines eyebrow-raising, never-before-told stories from inside the Senate and the White House with insights into how government does-or doesn't-work. A memoir by one of America's most recognized leaders, Dead Center offers a path forward from our polarized political gridlock to governance based on what our American founders practiced: Common Sense"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
POL006000
BIO010000
HIS036120
Autobiographies
Published
New York, NY : St. Martin's Press 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Joe Manchin, 1947- (author)
Other Authors
Nick Saban (writer of foreword)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
x, 271 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-264) and index.
ISBN
9781250411631
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: At Dead Center
  • Chapter 1. From Farmington to the Center of America
  • Chapter 2. Italian Catholic Guilt
  • Chapter 3. Love and Loss
  • Chapter 4. Leaving the Family Business
  • Chapter 5. Learning to Lose
  • Chapter 6. Sago
  • Chapter 7. Navigating the Political Earthquake
  • Chapter 8. I Got It Wrong
  • Chapter 9. Kicking the Habit
  • Chapter 10. Becoming "the Joe"
  • Chapter 11. The Soul of the Senate
  • Chapter 12. My Declaration of Independence
  • Chapter 13. Breaking Bread
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The former U.S. senator addresses a polarized politics. Manchin, former governor of and U.S. senator from West Virginia, entered the Senate in 2010 after winning a special election following the death of Robert Byrd. He went as a Democrat, the party of choice among working-class West Virginians for years--until, that is, what he calls the "war on coal" began and the polity flipped to the GOP overnight. Writes Manchin, "there were enough reasons to change my political affiliation to Republican right then and there." He might just as well have, for, as he writes, he killed President Biden's Build Back Better bill, refused to do away with the Republican-favoring filibuster, and, as he proudly writes, enjoyed "an open line of communication" with President Trump, adding, "I spoke to him more in the first two years of his presidency than I did to President Obama during all eight years of his time in office." Moreover, Manchin sounds Republican, calling climate change "the new religion" and writing of his salad days, "Back then, getting help from the government was seen as a last resort, not a way of life." He also dismisses the Democratic Party's "woke ideology, DEI mandates, and other social agendas." (He does allow that "I have watched the Republican Party lose itself to one man.") Before leaving the Senate, Manchin switched his affiliation to independent, and, he asserts, the "fastest-growing" party in the country today is "no party at all." Manchin proposes a number of reforms to reclaim the middle, some of them sensible (undoing theCitizens United dark-money regime, banning gerrymandering) and some unlikely, such as his effort to prohibit a sitting senator from campaigning against another sitting senator. Manchin's middle-of-the-road approach will appeal to those steering to the right. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.