Maureen Dowd, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and New York Times columnist, has been covering the Theater of the Absurd that we call Washington, D.C. for over thirty years. If anyone knows how fucked up our political system is, it’s her.
In “The Year of Voting Dangerously”, Dowd compiles some of her favorite and most apropos columns and articles she has written in 2016. Unfortunately, her book only covers columns up to July 31, 2016, leaving the most vital and ridiculous months of the campaign and the election out. One can only hope that Dowd will publish “The Year of Voting Dangerously, Part 2” soon.
Interspersed throughout the book are some of her news articles that she wrote during the administrations of Reagan, Bush the Elder, Bill Clinton, W., and Obama. It becomes quite clear that her purpose for doing so is to demonstrate the almost night and day differences between the political atmosphere and general attitudes that politicians of both parties had toward each other then versus now.
As loud and abusive as some of the public arguments and relationships between members of both parties became, at the end of the day, most if not all still had basic respect for each other.
Today, there is hardly even the pretense of respect between the aisles.
It truly is a dangerous time in American politics, as Dowd illustrates. Thankfully, she does it in her typically clever and scathingly humorous way. Her points hit closer to home when they are couched within satire or sarcasm.
While Dowd doesn’t hide her personal political leanings in her columns, she is nevertheless an equal opportunity critic, viciously downsizing and criticizing Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama with as much zeal as she does Donald Trump.
She coined the phrase “Clinton Slime Machine”, a brutally caustic but strangely appropriate description of the strategies, tactics, and political jockeying that the Clintons have utilized for self-aggrandizing and election purposes since both Hillary and Bill started pursuing political offices.
She criticizes Obama for his inability to work with Congress and his lackluster (a nice word) foreign policy. While she likes him, she acknowledges that being likable is not enough to be a decent president: “Barack Obama started off as a man self-consciously alone on stage and that’s how he is exiting. He is, for better and worse, too cool for school. His identity is defined by his desire to rise above the fray. Unfortunately, he is in politics, which is the fray. (p. 288)”
She even gets a few zingers in on “old news” Sarah Palin in her now-classic column from January 23, 2016 entitled “Sarah Palin Saves Feminism”: “But Palin has done us a favor by proving that a woman can stumble, babble incoherently on stage and spew snide garbage, and it isn’t a blot on the female copybook. (p. 155)”
As for Donald, she has plenty to say, but most of the time, all she has to do is copy Trump’s words verbatim and that’s enough to make him look like the moronic, fascist, narcissistic, pussy-grabbing misogynistic douchebag that he is.
If you’re a political news junkie, this book is a must read.