Providing an often-overlooked historical perspective, Gordon Lloyd and David Davenport show how the New Deal of the 1930s established the framework for todays U.S. domestic policy and the ongoing debate between progressives and conservatives. They examine the pivotal issues of the dispute, laying out the progressive-conservative arguments between Hoover and Roosevelt in the 1930s and illustrating how those issues remain current in public policy today. The authors detail how Hoover, alarmed by the excesses of the New Deal, pointed to the ideas that would constitute modern U.S. conservatism and how three pillarsliberty, limited government, and constitutionalismformed his case against the New Deal and, in turn, became the underlying philosophy of conservatism today. Illustrating how the debates between Franklin Roosevelt and Herbert Hoover were conducted much like the campaign rhetoric of liberals and conservatives in 2012, Lloyd and Davenport assert that conservatives must, to be a viable part of the national conversation, go back to come backbecause our history contains signposts for the way forward.
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Product Details
Weight: 195g
Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
Publication Date: 01 Apr 2014
Publisher: Hoover Institution PressU.S.
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780817916855
About David DavenportGordon Lloyd
Gordon Lloyd is a professor of public policy at the School of Public Policy at Pepperdine University USA. He also serves on the National Advisory Council for the Walter and Leonore Annenberg Presidential Learning Center through the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation. He lives in Malibu California.David Davenport is counselor to the director and a research fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is a columnist for Forbes.com and the San Francisco Chronicle and delivers regular radio commentaries on the Salem Radio Network and Townhall.com where he is a contributing editor. From 1985 to 2000 he served as president of Pepperdine University USA where he was also a professor of public policy and law.