From the Publisher
There is nobody who is writing in an episodic, daily way, in any medium, anywhere in the world, who has more influence on the way I think about politics than Steve Benen.” — Rachel Maddow
"A terrific read. ... Excellent. ... Irrefutable. ... There is so much good stuff in there that it would be impossible to select enough excerpts to do it justice.... It’s a must-have, in that it’s important to have all of this in one place in order to understand what happened, how, and why." — Daily Kos
“Through countless ripped-from-the-headlines examples, ‘The Impostors’ paints a grim picture of a political party in which the kids have taken over the grown-up table and the responsible adults are nowhere to be seen.” — Washington Post
"A staggering chronicle of Republican duplicity. ... A skillful illustration of how rank cynicism allowed Donald Trump to easily take control of the Republican Party." — Washington Monthly
"Thoroughly researched. ... Ably lays out the many disturbing trends in the Republican political arena, making a convincing case for his argument that the GOP has “quit governing” and now merely focuses on attaining and wielding power or simply negating any progress made by Democrats. ... A clear-eyed argument that 'strategy and governing [have] been replaced by instincts and partisan id.'"
— Kirkus Reviews
Daily Kos
"A terrific read. ... Excellent. ... Irrefutable. ... There is so much good stuff in there that it would be impossible to select enough excerpts to do it justice.... It’s a must-have, in that it’s important to have all of this in one place in order to understand what happened, how, and why."
Washington Monthly
"A staggering chronicle of Republican duplicity. ... A skillful illustration of how rank cynicism allowed Donald Trump to easily take control of the Republican Party."
Rachel Maddow
There is nobody who is writing in an episodic, daily way, in any medium, anywhere in the world, who has more influence on the way I think about politics than Steve Benen.
Washington Post
Through countless ripped-from-the-headlines examples, ‘The Impostors’ paints a grim picture of a political party in which the kids have taken over the grown-up table and the responsible adults are nowhere to be seen.
Washington Post
Through countless ripped-from-the-headlines examples, ‘The Impostors’ paints a grim picture of a political party in which the kids have taken over the grown-up table and the responsible adults are nowhere to be seen.
Kirkus Reviews
2020-03-24
A political writer argues that “the modern Republican Party has become a post-policy party.”
In this thoroughly researched book, Benen, blogger and award-winning producer of the Rachel Maddow Show, makes a solid case that in recent years, Republicans have repeatedly upended their once-cherished beliefs in order to focus on more power-oriented political and ideological goals. The author clearly demonstrates how Republicans have consistently reversed positions in order to score points against the Democrats, whether on trade, taxes, guns, immigration, or deficits. Regarding deficits, “since Watergate, every Democratic president has left office with a deficit smaller than when he started, and every Republican president has left office with a deficit larger than when he arrived.” Furthermore, even when Republicans agreed with Democrats, at least in principle, as in the case of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, their votes often failed to reflect bipartisanship. Despite 130 congressional hearings over multiple committees, Republicans—who had once supported many of the Affordable Care Act’s tenets—claimed Obama had “rammed through” the ACA. A particularly ironic example of willful contrariness was the Ebola crisis of 2014, during which Republicans either accused Obama of being “too hands off” or of being alarmist. Donald Trump, who had yet to declare his candidacy, even called for his resignation. The author ably lays out the many disturbing trends in the Republican political arena, making a convincing case for his argument that the GOP has “quit governing” and now merely focuses on attaining and wielding power or simply negating any progress made by Democrats. Unfortunately, given the pace at which events unfold in today’s political landscape, much of the narrative may feel like old news not long after publication.
A cleareyed argument that “strategy and governing [have] been replaced by instincts and partisan id.