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Down for the Count

Dirty Elections and the Rotten History of Democracy in America

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Down for the Count explores the tawdry history of elections in the United States—a chronicle of votes bought, stolen, suppressed, lost, miscounted, thrown into rivers, and litigated up to the U.S. Supreme Court—and uses it to explain why we are now experiencing the biggest backslide in voting rights in more than a century. This thoroughly revised edition, first published to acclaim and some controversy in 2005
as Steal This Vote, reveals why America is unique among established Western democracies in its inability to run clean, transparent elections. And it demonstrates, in crisp, clear, accessible language, how the partisan battles now raging over voter ID, out-of-control campaign spending, and minority voting rights fit into a long, largely unspoken tradition of hostility to the very notion of representative democracy.
Down for the Count is a multifaceted, deeply researched, and engaging critical assessment of a system whose ostensible commitment to democratic integrity often falls apart on contact with race, money,
and power. In an age of high-stakes electoral combat, billionaire-backed candidacies, and bottom-of-the-barrel campaigning, there can be no better time to listen to this troubling and revealing book.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 29, 2016
      With the 2016 election season in full flower, Gumbel, a British-born journalist, has “updated and thoroughly revised” his 2005 work Steal This Vote to further showcase the shortcomings of American representative democracy. The veteran columnist lists a number of defects in a history of “dirty elections,” such as gerrymandering, lack of national uniformity in voting rules, restrictive voter ID laws in several GOP-controlled states, over-the-top campaign spending, and instances of voter fraud. Integrating interviews with officials from both major political parties and a keen analysis of transgressions past and present, Gumbel digs into the racist, exclusionary legality of Jacksonian democracy, the strong-arm tactics of Boss Tweed’s Tammany Hall machine, the methodical obstacles to voting in the Jim Crow South, the bully-boy grip of Richard Daley’s Chicago, the Bush vs. Gore Florida recount fiasco, and the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. The history of the American system is rife with documented examples of disenfranchisement and voter suppression. As former president
      Jimmy Carter observed in 2004, “The American political system wouldn’t measure up to any sort of international standards.” Gumbel’s assured, confident voice holds the reader’s attention as he cautions against “apathy and political disengagement.”

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