TY - BOOK AU - Walsh,David Austin TI - Taking America back: the conservative movement and the far right SN - 9780300260977 (hardcover : alk. paper) AV - JC 573.2 W224t 2024 U1 - 320.520973 PY - 2024/// CY - New Haven, London PB - Yale University Press KW - Conservatism KW - United States KW - Conservadurismo KW - Estados Unidos KW - Right-wing extremists KW - Extremistas de derecha KW - Right and left (Political science) KW - Derecha e izquierda (Ciencias políticas) KW - Conservatisme KW - États-Unis KW - Extrémistes de droite KW - Politics and government KW - 20th century KW - Política y gobierno KW - Siglo XX N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-287) and index; The Right-Wing Popular Front, 1933-53. "It is time to brush aside this word 'democracy'" -- "The super superpatriotic type" : America First and the far right -- The role of the crackpot : the far right after World War II -- McCarthyism and the far right -- The Purge That Wasn't, 1953-91. Magazine wars -- The John Birch Society and the second Brown Scare -- The birth of the White Power Movement -- Who owns conservatism? N2 - "Since 2016, many commentators have expressed shock at the so-called rise of the far right in America at the expense of "responsible" and "respectable" conservatism. But is the far right an aberration in conservative politics? As David Austin Walsh shows, the mainstream conservative movement and the far right have been intertwined for nearly a century, and both were born out of a "right-wing popular front" linking racists, anti-Semites, and fascists in a broad coalition opposed to socialism, communism, and New Deal liberalism. Far from being outliers in the broader conservative coalition, these extremist elements were foundational in the creation of a right-wing political culture centered around shared political enemies, a penchant for conspiracy theories, and a desire to restore America to its "authentic" pre-New Deal values. The popular front included Merwin Hart, a New York business lobbyist active in far-right circles who became a lobbyist for the Franco regime in Spain, the original "America First" movement, the movement to prevent Jewish immigration to the United States after World War II, the John Birch Society, the American Nazi Party, the George Wallace presidential campaign of 1968, the fight over the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Pat Buchanan's support of Nazi war criminal John Demjanjuk during the Reagan Administration. And connecting this disparate coalition was William F. Buckley, Jr., the editor of National Review and America's leading "responsible conservative""--Publisher's website ER -