"Sweeping . . . Illuminating . . . Kazin provides rich historical context for a longstanding debate about Democratic priorities . . . [He] brings the care of a scholar to a big subject, but he also has a storyteller’s gift for making it accessible." —Janet Hook, Los Angeles Times
"Delightfully distinctive . . . Insights emerge not just from archives but from experience . . . What It Took to Win is expansive, an American history through the prism of the nation’s oldest mass party." —Carlos Lozada, The Washington Post
"Kazin’s account of the party’s history should be essential reading for anyone hoping to chart its future." —Eric Foner, The London Review of Books
"Important . . . [A] shrewd and very absorbing history." —Timothy Noah, The New York Times Book Review (Editors' Choice)
"Outstanding." —James T. Kloppenberg, Commonweal
"Michael Kazin’s What It Took to Win is a good place to look for [. . .] answers . . . What It Took to Win ought to help start a conversation that goes far beyond the book’s own scope, one that might lead to a clearer economic stance for the Democratic Party." —Nicholas Lemann, The Nation
"In his fine new book, Michael Kazin . . . makes an ambitious attempt to hone a unified theory of the Democratic Party’s 194-year record . . . [What It Took to Win] holds lessons for politics today . . . Well researched [and] accessible." —The Economist
"[Kazin] does not merely aim to offer context . . . His book exhorts Democrats to reacquaint themselves with their past battles against entrenched wealth and on behalf of ordinary people." —John Dickerson, The Atlantic
"[A] very fine new history of the Democrats . . . Nuanced . . . What It Took to Win is a rich but accessible book." —Sam Rosenfeld, The New Republic
"Michael Kazin’s immediately indispensable new history of the Democratic Party succeeds on every imaginable front. A compelling blow-by-blow institutional biography of the country’s oldest mass political entity, What It Took to Win offers thoughtful and persuasive insights into the party’s social and political culture." —Clayton Trutor, American History
"A lively, timely survey . . . [Kazin's] chapter on New York politics and Tammany Hall is brilliant . . . This should be today’s go-to book on its subject." —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Kazin delivers a wonderfully detailed record of the Democratic Party, from its beginnings to the present . . . Kazin’s account is an unvarnished and illuminating look at the past and potential future of a political party that endures.” —George Kendall, Booklist (starred review)
"[A] stylistically exemplary review of . . . the world’s oldest continuing mass political party . . . This book will please Kazin’s enthusiasts and win favor among new readers." —Library Journal
"Over its two hundred year history, the Democratic Party has evolved from the party of Jefferson Davis to the party that took on powerful corporate interests, built our middle class, and passed Civil Rights. Today, we put workers—ALL workers—at the center of all we do. Michael Kazin expertly explains how it happened, and why our nation’s success depends on Democrats fighting for the dignity of work." —Senator Sherrod Brown, author of Desk 88
"Michael Kazin has written a necessary and indispensable book about the history of the party that Martin Van Buren used to call 'the Democracy,' a nickname that we badly need to dust off. A political institution that has contained multitudes and held the contradictory political forces of our society—civil rights leaders and progressive populists alongside Dixiecrats and ardent segregationists, labor unions alongside major corporations, policy reformers alongside big-city bosses—the Democratic Party today is still our last best hope for making democracy work for the common good, especially the common man and the common woman. Kazin's eye-opening and crisply written book grounds us in a richly textured history of how we got to the present moment in the struggle for both mass political participation and what he calls 'moral capitalism.'" —Congressman Jamie Raskin
“There’s no better time than a half century into a paralyzing partisan standoff with Republicans to ask what it has taken, historically, for Democrats to win elections. Michael Kazin’s immensely valuable history of the good the bad, and the ugly of the Democratic Party charts its long path from its antimonopoly and pro-white supremacy origins, two centuries ago, to its pro-labor, New Deal, mid-twentieth-century decades in power, to the partial and fragile victories of its pro-Silicon Valley, antiracist present.” —Jill Lepore, author of These Truths: A History of the United States
"Michael Kazin’s What it Took to Win is accessible and learned, detailed and sweeping, opinionated and attentive to other points of view. It is history in the grand style: literary, interdisciplinary, unafraid of drawing lessons for future conduct. Offered at a perilous moment, Kazin’s interpretation of the Democratic Party is essential reading." —Randall Kennedy, professor at Harvard Law School and author of Say It Loud!: On Race, Law, History, and Culture
“Reading this lively and intriguing book by the estimable Michael Kazin is like learning, at last, the full back story of an elderly great-uncle who has forever been at the family dinner table. There are those unsavory episodes he never told us; the remarkable achievements we’d half-forgotten about; and finally the reminder that he is too large a presence to entirely love or hate, for the family absolutely cannot survive without him.” —Adam Hochschild, author of Rebel Cinderella
"Whatever your politics are, you owe it to yourself to dive into Michael Kazin's What It Took To Win, his new, eloquent and pathbreaking history of the Democratic Party that will command your attention from the very first page. Kazin performs something of a miracle: He manages, all at once, to be elegantly concise, briskly comprehensive, and thoroughly engaging. You will meet historical figures you didn't know while understanding those who you thought you knew far better. This is history at its best: honest, critical, beautifully rendered—and inspiring." —E. J. Dionne Jr., author of Our Divided Political Heart and co-author of 100% Democracy
"For years distinguished historian Michael Kazin has written insightfully about labor, populists, liberals and the Left. Now he has turned his always astute eye to telling the fascinating and important history of the political party that for two centuries has struggled to keep these factions—and more moderate members—within the fold. Anyone who worries about the polarization of politics today, and particularly within the Democratic Party itself, will take comfort that the party has survived such ruptures before, but they will also learn from this master historian what the past can tell us about 'what it took to win.'" —Lizabeth Cohen, author of Saving America’s Cities
“An engaging and insightful chronicle of the world’s oldest political party and its leaders from the late eighteenth century to the present. Sensitive to the party’s shortcomings as well as its strengths, Kazin illumines the evolution of an internally-divided, ever-changing organization that resisted calls for racial equality during much of the nineteenth century and then evolved into the party of progressivism, the New Deal, the Great Society, and Barack Obama. Laced with revealing anecdotes and colorful character portraits, the book’s narrative of the changing fortunes and convictions of the party gives shape to the entirety of American political history.” —Alexander Keyssar, professor at Harvard University and author of Why Do We Still Have the Electoral College?
"Michael Kazin has written an inspired and sweeping account of the Democratic Party's struggle for moral capitalism and electoral power. With remarkable insight, Kazin weaves together different periods and players in the party's history, making sense of disparate pieces. The work of one of our great historians, What It Took to Win offers a compelling, clear-eyed argument about what Democrats have accomplished as well as their limitations. This is the single best history that we have about the Democratic Party." —Julian Zelizer, author of Burning Down the House: Newt Gingrich and Rise of the New Republican Party
12/20/2021
Georgetown University historian Kazin (War Against War) delivers a brisk and informative survey of the Democratic Party’s evolution from its origins in the 1820s to the present. A supporter of the party who canvassed for JFK at age 12, Kazin contends that Democrats have been most successful “when they articulated an egalitarian economic vision and advocated laws intended to fulfill it.” He details how early leaders including Martin Van Buren and Andrew Jackson brought together shopkeepers, slave owners, and “working-class radicals” by advocating for strict limits on federal power and appealing to “the creed of white supremacy,” and notes that the party “waver little from its racist convictions” until the 1930s, when FDR’s White House tentatively embraced an “interracial constituency” that would eventually push through groundbreaking civil rights legislation in the 1960s. Throughout, Kazin spotlights factions within the party, including Jesse Jackson’s Rainbow Coalition and today’s “multiracial millennials” led by congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Readers will also gain insight into lesser-known figures such as Tammany Hall boss “Honest” John Kelly and three-time presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan, who helped push Democrats toward supporting government intervention in the economy in the 1890s. The result is an insightful introduction to the complex history of the “oldest mass party in the world.” Agent: Sandra Dijkstra, Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency. (Mar.)
02/04/2022
Preeminent historian Kazin (American Dreamers) draws upon decades of experience analyzing American labor, left, and populist struggles in this stylistically exemplary review of what he deems the world's oldest continuing mass political party. Kazin uses the theme of "moral capitalism," for which he credits Lizabeth Cohen—an ideology of achieving the economic goals of prosperity and security for the greatest number of people, fostered by regulated markets. The Democratic Party evolved from a propertied, white male faction to an assemblage of increasingly diverse interest groups; Kazin argues that the Democrats win at the presidential level (which is his primary focus) when they successfully articulate and implement this ideal vision. Too long on the wrong side of the fight for civil rights (for women and then for Black Americans), the party has worked to learn from history, Kazin posits. Scholarly and general readers should note that this book is intentionally not a complete history of the Democratic Party but only of its election results; it's also more focused on nationwide Democratic Party leaders than on lesser-known or anonymous members of social movements. VERDICT: This book will please Kazin's enthusiasts and win favor among new readers previously bereft of his reality-grounded ruminations.—Frederick J. Augustyn Jr.
★ 2021-11-02
A warts-and-all history of “the oldest mass party in the world.”
In his latest, Kazin, a Georgetown historian and editor emeritus of Dissent, delivers a lively, timely survey whose central theme is the Democrats’ two-centuries-long effort to assist ordinary working people. That theme is neither novel nor, coming from a historian of the left, surprising. Yet despite the author’s Democratic favoritism—he occasionally writes in the first person—this is not an anti-Republican tract. Like Heather Cox Richardson’s analogous history of the Republican Party, To Make Men Free, Kazin applies tough scrutiny and due criticism to an institution that, as early as the 1840s, was unparalleled in its electoral and institutional innovations and acceptance of popular politics. While erring in calling Thomas Jefferson’s original Democratic-Republican Party a “proto-party” and ignoring earlier pioneering state-level achievements in enlarging the electorate, Kazin is on solid ground. To enliven his narrative and illustrate his arguments, he foregrounds often forgotten public figures like William Jennings Bryan (whose biography, A Godly Hero, Kazin wrote), Belle Moskowitz, Sidney Hillman, and Adam Clayton Powell Jr. The author’s chapter on New York politics and Tammany Hall is brilliant. He doesn’t shy away from emphasizing the party’s control by Southern slaveholders, starting in the days of Jefferson and Andrew Jackson and extending into the 1860s, nor the outright racism of their heirs. He also digs into the deep misogyny in party ranks and the schisms that resulted from its extraordinary, unprecedented diversity—except for the long exclusion of African Americans. Without flinching, Kazin charts the party’s downward course from Franklin Roosevelt’s huge 1936 election victory—“the most complete victory in the history of partisan presidential elections”—to its abject losses starting in the 1960s. As the narrative thins toward the end, arriving at the present day, the author closes with unmistakable tones of lament for the party’s recent fortunes and missteps.
This should be today’s go-to book on its subject.