Dissent: How the Radical Right Silenced Its Victims and Stole the Supreme Court
By (Author) Jackie Calmes
Little, Brown & Company
Twelve
9th November 2021
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political structures: democracy
Right-of-centre democratic ideologies
Legal systems: judges and judicial powers
347.035092
Hardback
496
Width 160mm, Height 234mm, Spine 44mm
720g
In DISSENT, award-winning investigative journalist Jackie Calmes brings readers closer to the truth of who Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh is, where he came from, and how he and the Republican party at large managed to secure one of the highest seats of power in the land.
Kavanaugh's rise to the justice who solidified conservative control of the supreme court is a story of personal achievement, but also a larger, political tale: of the Republican Party's movement over four decades toward the far right, and its parallel campaign to dominate the government's judicial branch as well as the other two.And Kavanaugh uniquely personifies this history. Fourteen years before reaching the Supreme Court, during a three-year fight for a seat on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, Democratic Senator Dick Durbin would say to Kavanaugh, "It seems that you are the Zelig or Forrest Gump of Republican politics. You show up at every scene of the crime."Featuring revelatory new reporting and exclusive interviews, DISSENT is a harrowing look into the highest echelons of political power in the United States, and a captivating survey of the people who will do anything to have it."Ambitious...Calmes's book stands out for how well she details the ways judicial confirmations have devolved into 'a gang war' endlessly provoking 'retaliatory hits.'"--Washington Post
"A fascinating look not only into the life and career of Kavanaugh, but also into the American conservative movement's successful long-term plan to move the Supreme Court rightward. Calmes is a first-rate reporter, and her skills are on full display here. Riveting...DISSENT is a remarkable work of reportage."--NPR
"A scrupulous history of the Republican Party's efforts to put a conservative 'lock' on the Supreme Court. [Calmes] lucidly and comprehensively explains the mechanics of the 'ascendant conservative legal movement.'"
--Publishers Weekly"Jackie Calmes persuasively describes how, with a little luck and more than a little duplicity, Republicans have virtually assured a conservative-dominated Supreme Court for the foreseeable future. The focus is on the nomination battle over Brett Kavanaugh, a very smart and very partisan jurist with, as she details, 'a troubling pattern of shading the truth.' But the backdrop is the radicalization of the Republican Party over recent decades. DISSENT should be read by anyone who cares about the Supreme Court and, more broadly, a fair and honest political process."
--Albert R. Hunt, Washington columnist, podcast host, and former bureau chief of the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg NewsJackie Calmes is the White House editor for the Los Angeles Times Washington bureau. Calmes joined the LA Times from the New York Times Washington bureau, where she was a chief economics correspondent covering the global financial crisis, White House correspondent, and national politics reporter. She was at the New York Times from August 2008 to 2017. Previously she had been chief political correspondent for the Wall Street Journal's Washington bureau.