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The Last Best Hope

Restoring Conservatism and America's Promise

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Record deficits. Socialist spending sprees. A reckless foreign policy. And an American economy racing toward bankruptcy. Joe Scarborough tells us how Republican leaders in Washington got us here and why Democrats are making things so much worse.
The Last Best Hope moves the American conservative movement into the new century by reviving the forgotten genius of Burke, Kirk, and Buckley. It is more than a blueprint for conservatives’ return to power. It is a road map that is guaranteed to return America to greatness.
Four years ago, Joe Scarborough warned his own party that reckless spending would wreck the economy and ruin their majority. Today, his warning to the GOP is even more direct. The Republican Party must reform or die. Conservatives will no longer blindly follow party bosses who continue to betray their values and weaken their country. With The Last Best Hope, Joe Scarborough begins a new chapter in the conservative movement, and offers hope for a new day for America.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 11, 2009
      In this disappointingly mundane book, Scarborough, host of MSNBC's Morning Joe, mistakes his skills at showmanship for those of critical analysis. From the Iraq War to the recent financial crisis, his arguments amount to little more than a superficial précis of the current political moment. For most readers, this book will be an ideological retread and an unimaginative slog. Unlike the recent writings of Reihan Salam and Ross Douthat, whose New Majority
      labored to be a prescriptive way forward for conservatives, Scarborough hardly gets outside of the well-traversed policy debates and received wisdom of Beltway professionals. While he sees his book as a blueprint for a renewed conservative politics, his only stab at unconventional thinking is to advocate a conservative embrace of green politics. For all the book's flaws, it never descends to ad hominem attacks or becomes a platform for gross personal vendettas, nor does it trade in the self-regard of the Olberman or O'Reilly variety, which is to Scarborough's credit. But these qualities are not enough to recommend readers pluck this one from the shelf, or even the bargain bin.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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