Rick Henderson from the April 1996 issue
The Almanac of American Politics 1996 , by Michael Barone and Grant Ujifusa, Washington: National Journal Inc., 1,550 pages, $64.95/49.95 paper
Politics in America 1996 , edited by Philip D. Duncan and Christine C. Lawrence, Washington: Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1,546 pages, $54.95 paper
In late January of last year, I telephoned Michael Barone, the U.S. News and World Report senior writer and principal author of The Almanac of American Politics, at his Washington office. "I'm in the third district of Arizona," he said, racing to update his almanac after the 1994 elections.
The deadline for the new edition was no more than a few weeks away, and I thought he was working his way across America alphabetically. "Good lord," I said, "how will you ever finish on time?"
Don't worry, Barone told me. He said he randomly selects the order in which he writes about congressional districts. "If I didn't mix them up, this would drive me crazy."
Barone has been at this for a quarter-century now. Every two years since 1971, Barone and his Harvard College buddy Grant Ujifusa, now a senior editor at Reader's Digest, have offered a panoramic view of the nation and its elected officials. With a few research assistants and editors, after each congressional election the two put together a 250,000-word volume that political reporters and Washington players find indispensable. Over time, Barone has taken over more of the Almanac's writing, to the extent that print and television ads for the Almanac portray Barone as the sole author.
But there's a newer kid on the block. Since 1982, Congressional Quarterly's Politics in America has provided another source for political junkies checking up on the nation's elected officials. Compiled by a staff of more than three dozen Capitol Hill reporters and editors, Politics in America also gives a detailed description of each congressional district and of the representatives and senators voters send to Washington.
Both volumes are loaded with voting records, positions on issues, even the geographic and demographic attributes of the 435 congressional districts. They include biographical information on governors and members of Congress, vote tallies in recent primary and general elections, district and Washington office addresses and telephone numbers, and ratings of the members from different interest groups. And the two encyclopedias have attracted their fans, especially among the journalists who use them, as the dueling blurbs on the backs of the books indicate: David Brinkley, David Broder, and Al Hunt plug Politics In America; George Will, Bryant Gumbel, and Jim Lehrer put in their two cents for The Almanac of American Politics.
But these aren't identical, or even interchangeable, publications. So unless you're a lobbyist, a journalist, a researcher, or a political junkie, should you care? It's part of my job to try to keep up with the personalities on Capitol Hill. Political encyclopedias like this are as essential for me as a Rolodex. But could you, faithful REASON reader, get 50 or 60 bucks' value from one of these hefty tomes?
Actually, yes--especially if you invest in The Almanac of American Politics. Politics in America promises to do nothing more than present a ton of data about Congress and the people who inhabit it. The Almanac, by contrast, comments on the nation's political zeitgeist and how the executive and legislative branches in Washington interact with governors and state legislatures. And while Barone's at it, he offers some pretty lively commentary.
Compare the opening essays in each book. Politics in America starts with a few hundred words congratulating itself for recognizing, in its first edition (1982), a thirtysomething history professor from Georgia "who wanted to see guerilla theater on the floor" of the House. "Today, eight Congresses later," says the introduction, "Newt Gingrich's fantastic political voyage has remade the face of American government." But will Bob Dole and the slow-moving Senate go along with the firebrands in the House? There's nothing here you couldn't find in any garden-variety newspaper editorial.
Barone instead offers a 23-page introduction with the daunting title, "The Restoration of the Constitutional Order and the Return to Tocquevillian America." Barone, who along with everything else is a pretty fair historian (check out his 1990 book Our Country: The Shaping of America from Roosevelt to Reagan), explains that the 1994 election was neither a temper tantrum by angry voters, nor "did [it] entirely transform either the political opinion or civil society" toward sympathy for limited government. Instead the election "provided an occasion and a setting in which opinions which had long been held could be expressed and a society that had been for some time reshaping itself could reveal its new form."
Barone argues that the nation seems "to be returning to a Tocquevillian America, to something resembling the country that the French aristocrat Alexis de Tocqueville visited in 1831 and described in his Democracy in America. Tocqueville's America was egalitarian [believing in the moral equality of every citizen], individualistic, decentralized, religious, property-loving, lightly governed."
He's not saying, as National Journal reporter Paul Starobin suggested in a December Los Angeles Times column, that Americans long for a revival of slavery, outdoor toilets, whale-bone corsets, and commerce by barge. Rather, Barone believes that the country is rejecting the high taxes, heavy regulations, and stifling bureaucracies that started to take hold in Washington during the New Deal and have driven the three branches of the federal government since the days of Franklin Roosevelt.
In Barone's view, average Americans no longer want the government to redistribute jobs and income or concentrate on eliminating the business cycle. Instead, he writes, "The first thing voters seek of government is order--not some arbitrary, authoritarian order, but a rational, predictable order in which ordinary people can raise their families, make their livings, participate in their communities and go about their daily lives without fear of physical violence or economic disaster."
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