Bush v. Gore: Exposing the Growing Crisis in American Democracy
Who could forget the Supreme Court’s controversial 5-4 decision in Bush v. Gore or the 2000 presidential campaign and election that preceded it? Hanging chads, butterfly ballots, endless recounts, raucous allegations, and a constitutional crisis were all roiled into a confusing and potentially dangerous mix—until the Supreme Court decision allowed George W. Bush to become the 43rd President of the United States, despite losing the popular vote to Al Gore.

Praised by scholars and political pundits alike, the original edition of Charles Zelden’s book set a new standard for our understanding of that monumental decision. A probing chronicle and critique of the vexing and acrimonious affair, it offered the most accurate and up-to-date analysis of a remarkable episode in American politics. Highly readable, its comprehensive coverage, depth of documentation and detail, and analytic insights remain unrivaled on the subject.

In this third expanded edition Zelden offers a powerful history of voting rights and elections in America since 2000. Bush v. Gore exposes the growing crisis by detailing the numerous ways in which the unlearned and wrongly learned “lessons of 2000” have impacted American election law through the growth of voter suppression via legislation and administrative rulings, and, provides a clear warning of how unchecked partisanship arising out of Bush v. Gore threatens to undermine American democracy in general and the 2020 election in particular.
1136925330
Bush v. Gore: Exposing the Growing Crisis in American Democracy
Who could forget the Supreme Court’s controversial 5-4 decision in Bush v. Gore or the 2000 presidential campaign and election that preceded it? Hanging chads, butterfly ballots, endless recounts, raucous allegations, and a constitutional crisis were all roiled into a confusing and potentially dangerous mix—until the Supreme Court decision allowed George W. Bush to become the 43rd President of the United States, despite losing the popular vote to Al Gore.

Praised by scholars and political pundits alike, the original edition of Charles Zelden’s book set a new standard for our understanding of that monumental decision. A probing chronicle and critique of the vexing and acrimonious affair, it offered the most accurate and up-to-date analysis of a remarkable episode in American politics. Highly readable, its comprehensive coverage, depth of documentation and detail, and analytic insights remain unrivaled on the subject.

In this third expanded edition Zelden offers a powerful history of voting rights and elections in America since 2000. Bush v. Gore exposes the growing crisis by detailing the numerous ways in which the unlearned and wrongly learned “lessons of 2000” have impacted American election law through the growth of voter suppression via legislation and administrative rulings, and, provides a clear warning of how unchecked partisanship arising out of Bush v. Gore threatens to undermine American democracy in general and the 2020 election in particular.
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Bush v. Gore: Exposing the Growing Crisis in American Democracy

Bush v. Gore: Exposing the Growing Crisis in American Democracy

by Charles L. Zelden
Bush v. Gore: Exposing the Growing Crisis in American Democracy

Bush v. Gore: Exposing the Growing Crisis in American Democracy

by Charles L. Zelden

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Overview

Who could forget the Supreme Court’s controversial 5-4 decision in Bush v. Gore or the 2000 presidential campaign and election that preceded it? Hanging chads, butterfly ballots, endless recounts, raucous allegations, and a constitutional crisis were all roiled into a confusing and potentially dangerous mix—until the Supreme Court decision allowed George W. Bush to become the 43rd President of the United States, despite losing the popular vote to Al Gore.

Praised by scholars and political pundits alike, the original edition of Charles Zelden’s book set a new standard for our understanding of that monumental decision. A probing chronicle and critique of the vexing and acrimonious affair, it offered the most accurate and up-to-date analysis of a remarkable episode in American politics. Highly readable, its comprehensive coverage, depth of documentation and detail, and analytic insights remain unrivaled on the subject.

In this third expanded edition Zelden offers a powerful history of voting rights and elections in America since 2000. Bush v. Gore exposes the growing crisis by detailing the numerous ways in which the unlearned and wrongly learned “lessons of 2000” have impacted American election law through the growth of voter suppression via legislation and administrative rulings, and, provides a clear warning of how unchecked partisanship arising out of Bush v. Gore threatens to undermine American democracy in general and the 2020 election in particular.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780700629688
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Publication date: 03/03/2021
Series: Landmark Law Cases and American Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 360
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Charles L. Zelden is professor of history at Nova Southeastern University in Ft. Lauderdale, FL. His previous books include Thurgood Marshall: Race, Rights, and the Struggle for a More Perfect Union and Battle for the Black Ballot: Smith v. Allwright and the Defeat of the Texas All-White Primary (Kansas).

Table of Contents

Editors’ Preface

Preface: The Case That Must Be Named

Acknowledgments

1. A Vote Too Close to Call

2. Enter the Lawyers

3. Eye of the Beholder

4. the Battlefield of Litigation

5. The Ticking of the Clock

6. Ballots before the Bench

7. “A Florida Hurricane Heading to Washington”

8. Headfirst into the Political Thicket

9. A Self-Inflicted Wound?

10. The Unlearned Lessons of 2000

11. (Wrong) Lessons Learned: Bush v. Gore at Twenty

Afterword: The Process Matters

Chronology: A Time Line of Events for the 2000 Presidential Postelection Crisis

Bibliographic Essay

Index

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