Left in the Center
The Liberal Party of New York and the Rise and Fall of American Social Democracy
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Published:15th Jan '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Daniel Soyer's history of the Liberal Party of New York State, Left in the Center, shows the surprising relationship between Democratic Socialism and mainstream American politics.
Beginning in 1944 and lasting until 2002, the Liberal Party offered voters an ideological seal of approval and played the role of strategic kingmaker in the electoral politics of New York State. The party helped elect presidents, governors, senators, and mayors, and its platform reflected its founders' social democratic principles. In practical politics, the Liberal Party's power resided in its capacity to steer votes to preferred Democrats or Republicans with a reasonable chance of victory. This uneasy balance between principle and pragmatism, which ultimately proved impossible to maintain, is at the heart of the dramatic political story presented in Left in the Center.
The Liberal Party, the longest-lived of New York's small parties, began as a means for anti-Communist social democrats to have an impact on the politics and policy of New York City, Albany, and Washington, DC. It provided a political voice for labor activists, independent liberals, and pragmatic social democrats. Although the party devolved into what some saw as a cynical patronage machine, it remained a model for third-party power and for New York's influential Conservative and, later, the Working Families parties.
With an active period ranging from the successful senatorial career of Jacob Javits to the mayoralties of John Lindsay and Rudy Giuliani, the Liberal Party effectively shaped the politics and policy of New York. The practical gains and political cost of that complicated trade-off is at the heart of Left in the Center.
In Left in the Center, Daniel Soyer offers an extensively sourced and detailed history of the party's founding, growth, shifting ideologies, and eventual demise in the early 2000s.
* The Hudson River Valley Review *Daniel Hudson's book on the Liberal Party of New York is a gift to students of New York State politics, whether at the academy of in the political arena. Simply put, this historical work is useful today on many fronts. It shows struggles and successes, aspirations and realities, power and influence, greed and generosity.
* Hudson River Valley ReviISBN: 9781501759871
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 35mm
Weight: 907g
432 pages