#36 - JRL 2006-58 - JRL Home
Date: Tue, 7 Mar 2006
From: Jerry Hough (jhough@duke.edu)
Subject: New book[: Changing Party Coalitions: The
Strange Red-State Alignment]
I have been teaching about the US Presidency for seven years, especially on
the foreign policy strategy of Presidents over time. The first book from this
work has now been published: Changing Party Coalitions: The Strange Red-State
Alignment.
For students of US-Soviet relations, by far the most interesting point in the
book is the argument that European-American ethnic groups, then called races,
were as important in American policy to Europe as Cuban-Americans are in policy
to Cuba. With British-Americans and German-Americans comprising over half the US
population and with their countries at war, the Republicans, the party of the
two in the North, had to be the party of detente to relieve the terrible
tensions in their basic coalition. They really were the party of the
reunification of Germany.
Since the issue was too sensitive to discuss openly, it could only be
discussed in codewords. The facts of geography made debates and policy toward
the Soviet Union a perfect surrogate, and most of the issues in American policy
debates about the Soviet Union from 1933 to 1950 really did not concern the
Soviet Union, but how to deal with Germany. I will be writing a good deal on the
details of these debates and policy differences in the next few years.
The theme of the book is that the transformation of the European-American
"races" into "whites" and the end of the North-South conflict destroyed the base
of the old party coalitions and that we still have not found a good alternative.
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