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American Cicero - Mario Cuomo and the Defense of American Liberalism (Hardcover)
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American Cicero - Mario Cuomo and the Defense of American Liberalism (Hardcover)
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Mario Cuomo is in many respects one of the most significant liberal
politicians in the postwar era: a three-term governor of one the
nation's largest states and an eloquent defender of the Democratic
Party's progressive legacy during a period of conservative
ascendancy. Yet in other respects he never lived up to his
supporters' hopes. His gubernatorial record was spotty, and when he
had the chance to seek the presidency, he equivocated, Hamlet-like,
before deciding against it and crushing the hopes of the party's
progressive wing. His mixed record has made it very difficult for
scholars and biographers to clarify his legacy. Was he a symbol of
liberalism's long decline in twentieth-century American politics,
or was he a prophet in the wilderness, heralding the rise of a new
progressivism? Saladin Ambar's American Cicero weaves elements of
biography, political history, and political theory into a novel
interpretation of Cuomo's life and legacy. Tracing his life from
the streets of an immigrant neighborhood in Queens to his final
years in Albany, Ambar argues that Cuomo kept the spent embers of
liberalism alive in an era when it seemed that conservatism was
approaching full-spectrum dominance-even within the Democratic
Party itself. In a series of important speeches over the course of
the 1980s, Cuomo drew upon his singular oratorical powers to offer
a progressive vision that revived and expanded upon the
policymaking legacy of the New Deal and Great Society. At a time
when pessimism about presidential electoral prospects reigned in
the Democratic Party, his voice-buttressed by a string of electoral
victories in New York-provided succor to the liberal faithful.
Unsurprisingly, party professionals saw him as the next great
Democratic presidential candidate. Yet when he had the chance to
run-in 1988 and 1992-he decided not to. His political career ended
in 1994, when he was voted out of office in New York in a
nationwide Republican wave. To explain puzzling Cuomo's career
trajectory, American Cicero begins with his background in New York
City politics before shifting to his record as governor and his
forays into presidential politics. Ambar traveled to Italy in
search of answers to lingering questions about Cuomo, chiefly why
he never ran for president. Conversations in Cuomo's ancestral land
revealed concerns about an assassination attempt-his mother
admonished him, "remember what happened to the last Catholic
president"-and even proto-"birther" rumors that Cuomo had been born
in Italy. Whatever clenched his decision not to run, Cuomo was
nevertheless the nation's most articulate advocate for a
progressive agenda at liberalism's ebb tide. His vision has had a
measurable impact on twenty-first century Democratic progressives,
most notably Barack Obama. American Cicero promises to not only
re-establish Cuomo's central place in modern American liberalism,
but also force readers to reassess liberalism's fortunes following
the close of the New Deal era.
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