Chuck Hagel: Moving Forward

Couverture
U of Nebraska Press, 1 janv. 2006 - 223 pages
In late August 2004 the Republicans were celebrating the nomination of incumbent George W. Bush for another term as president of the United States. In the midst of the festivities, Chuck Hagel, a senator from Nebraska, was telling reporters that the Republican Party had ?come loose of its moorings.? This was a bold position for someone identified by the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and Boston Globe as a prospective 2008 presidential candidate, but it was not surprising coming from a Republican senator who had also recently remarked that the occupation of Iraq was poorly planned and that it had encouraged the spread of terror cells throughout the world. Who is Chuck Hagel, what is his story, and is he a genuine player on the national political stage? Charlyne Berens sets out to answer these questions in her close and careful look at one of the most interesting and independent figures on the current American political scene.

Having survived a tour of duty in Vietnam and having made a fortune as a pioneer in the cellular phone industry, Chuck Hagel seemingly came out of nowhere to beat a popular sitting governor in a race for the U.S. Senate in 1996. Berens charts Hagel?s quick rise to national recognition and influence and examines the background that has led Hagel to an outspoken internationalism that often puts him at odds with his own party and president. This complex, plain-spoken Nebraskan may be on his way to the White House. Charlyne Berens explains why and how.

 

Pages sélectionnées

Table des matières

Who Is This Guy?
1
The Early Years
11
Looking to Washington
45
Moving Forward in the Senate
95
Risking the Administrations Wrath
145
Going for the Big One?
185
Notes
219
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (2006)

Charlyne Berens is a Professor of Journalism at the University of Nebraska?Lincoln. She is the author of One House: The Unicameral?s Progressive Vision for Nebraska (Nebraska 2005) and Power to the People: Social Choice and the Populist/Progressive Ideal.

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