Author David Paul Kuhn, whose book The New York Times recognized as one of the "100 Notable Books of 2020,” and former Virginia Senator Jim Webb to discuss the drift of the white working-class voter to the Republican party and the enormous impact on U.S. politics. Together, they’ll help explain what drove the white working-class away from the Democratic party and towards Republicans and how that schism continues to drive class conflict and political polarization today. In light of the most recent election, this will surely be a timely and essential conversation. The conversation will be moderated by the brilliant journalist Clyde Haberman.
Election expert and past TCG speaker, Charlie Cook, described David’s new book, “The Hardhat Riot: Nixon, New York City, and the Dawn of the White Working-Class Revolution“ as well-written, painstakingly researched,...an important book that gives life to history and explains the divorce between working-class whites and the Democratic Party”.
Thursday, January 7, 2021
5pm ET
Author David Paul Kuhn, whose book The New York Times recognized as one of the "100 Notable Books of 2020,” and former Virginia Senator Jim Webb to discuss the drift of the white working-class voter to the Republican party and the enormous impact on U.S. politics. Together, they’ll help explain what drove the white working-class away from the Democratic party and towards Republicans and how that schism continues to drive class conflict and political polarization today. In light of the most recent election, this will surely be a timely and essential conversation. The conversation will be moderated by the brilliant journalist Clyde Haberman.
Election expert and past TCG speaker, Charlie Cook, described David’s new book, “The Hardhat Riot: Nixon, New York City, and the Dawn of the White Working-Class Revolution“ as well-written, painstakingly researched,...an important book that gives life to history and explains the divorce between working-class whites and the Democratic Party”.
Thursday, January 7, 2021
5pm ET
Kuhn is a political analyst and writer who has written several books that have been heavily praised, including his most recent one that was named on The New York Times "100 Notable Books of 2020." Kuhn has served as the chief political writer for CBS News online, a senior political writer for Politico as well as chief political correspondent at RealClearPolitics. He has also written for The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post Magazine, The Los Angeles Times, National Review, New Republic, among other publications, and regularly appears on networks ranging from BBC to Fox News.
His book is credited by famed strategist James Carville as “perhaps the best book ever on how Democrats lost the white working class” and in the WSJ, Senator Webb stated that Kuhn was an “unacknowledged prophet” for the “consistency” of his longtime “warnings about the reasons white working people were moving away from the Democrats [which] were largely dismissed by the news media and party elites.”
Webb is the former Democratic Senator from Virginia He wrote, introduced, and guided to passage the Post-9.11 GI Bill, the most significant veterans legislation since World War II, and co-authored legislation which exposed 60 billion dollars of waste, fraud and abuse in Iraq and Afghanistan wartime-support contracts. A long-time advocate of fixing America’s broken criminal justice system, Mr. Webb was spotlighted in The Atlantic as one of the world’s “Brave Thinkers” for tackling prison reform and possessing “two things vanishingly rare in Congress: a conscience and a spine.” He went on to give a response to the State of the Union which has been regarded as one of the stronger State of the Union responses in recent memory.
He previously served as Secretary of the Navy under President Reagan and is the recipient of the Purple Heart. Webb is also an Emmy Award winning journalist, a filmmaker, and the author of ten books. Since retiring, Webb is continued to be a prolific writer and has written for many national journals including USA Today, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal
Haberman has served as a journalist with The New York Times since 1977. His assignments included staff editor of The Week in Review; Metro reporter; City Hall bureau chief; and foreign correspondent in Tokyo and Rome, and bureau chief in Jerusalem. He is known and received tremendous praise for his coverage of the Attica prison rebellion, the fall of Ferdinand Marcos, the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe, the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, the 1993 Oslo accords between Israel and the Palestinians, the aftermath of the September 11 attacks and the rise of Islamic terrorism in the Middle East.
He was part of a Times team that won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News, awarded for coverage of the prostitution scandal that led to Eliot Spitzer's resignation as New York governor. He continues to be a NYT columnist and writes the Retro Report essays for The New York Times.
