Menasha Public Library (Elisha D. Smith)

President Carter, the White House years, Stuart E. Eizenstat ; foreword by Madeleine Albright

Label
President Carter, the White House years, Stuart E. Eizenstat ; foreword by Madeleine Albright
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
resource.biographical
individual biography
Illustrations
platesillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
President Carter
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1004376369
Responsibility statement
Stuart E. Eizenstat ; foreword by Madeleine Albright
Sub title
the White House years
Summary
"The Carter presidency is the most underappreciated of the last century. Often considered just a smiling but ineffectual Southerner in a sweater, Jimmy Carter deserves to be remembered instead as a risk taker who did what he felt was right, not what would be politically expedient, whose legacy led to presidential successes long after his term, and whose list of lasting achievements reshaped the country. Stuart Eizenstat saw everything firsthand. As Carter's Chief Domestic Policy Adviser, he was directly involved in all domestic and economic decisions as well as in many involving foreign policy. Famous for the legal pads on which he recorded every meeting and call, he draws on more than 5,000 pages of contemporaneous notes, as well as declassified documents and more than 350 interviews he conducted with the era's key players from both parties, to write this comprehensive yet intimate history. Eizenstat takes you inside Camp David during the grueling negotiations for peace between Israel and Egypt; shows how Carter transformed our transportation, environment, and energy policies and supported a tough monetary policy that finally defeated stagflation; and lays out how Carter made human rights the centerpiece of American foreign policy. This book is no apologia, however. Eizenstat analyzes Carter's triumphs and failures honestly so that we can understand how he dealt with some of the most intractable challenges any president has faced. He reveals the story behind the "malaise" speech and how the cabinet firing that followed nearly cost Carter his vice president. He describes the Iranian hostage crisis from both inside the White House and Ayatollah Khomeini's camp. And he puts you in the war room during Carter's 1980 presidential campaign against Ted Kennedy and Ronald Reagan. In the end, Eizenstat's definitive chronicle of Carter's consequential term in office shows that this good man from Georgia was a far better president than history has so far recognized."--Dust jacket
Table Of Contents
Part I: Into the White House. The 1976 campaign ; A perilous transition ; The making of the modern Vice President ; A new kind of First Lady ; The indispensable man -- Part II: Energy. The moral equivalent of war ; Energizing Congress ; The Senate graveyard ; Energy and the dollar at the Bonn summit ; Into the pork barrel, reluctantly -- Part III: The environment. An early interest ; The water wars ; Alaska forever wild, despite its senators -- Part IV: The economy. The great stagflation ; The consumer populist ; Saving New York and Chrysler -- Part V: Peace in the Middle East. The clash of peace and politics ; Sadat changes history ; Carter's triumph at Camp David ; A cold peace -- Part VI: Peace in the rest of the world. The Panama Canal and Latin America ; The Soviet Union ; Afghanistan -- Part VII: The unraveling: resignations and reshuffling. The "malaise" speech ; Resignations and reshuffling -- Part VIII: Iran. The rise of the Ayatollah ; The fall of the president -- Part IX: A catastrophic conclusion. "Where's the Carter bill, when we need it?" ; No good deed goes unpunished ; Are you better off ...? ; Final daysIntroduction -- Into the White House -- Energy -- The environment -- The economy -- Peace in the Middle East -- Peace in the rest of the world -- The unraveling: resignations and reshuffling -- Iran -- A catastrophic conclusion
Content
Mapped to

Incoming Resources