Pat Buchanan
Patrick Joseph Buchanan (/bjuːˈkænən/; born November 2, 1938) is an American political commentator, columnist, politician and broadcaster. Buchanan was an assistant and special consultant to U.S. Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Ronald Reagan, and was an original host on CNN's Crossfire.[1] He sought the Republican presidential nomination in 1992 and 1996. He ran on the Reform Party ticket in the 2000 presidential election.
Pat Buchanan | |
---|---|
White House Communications Director | |
In office February 6, 1985 – March 1, 1987 | |
President | Ronald Reagan |
Preceded by | Michael A. McManus Jr. |
Succeeded by | Jack Koehler |
Personal details | |
Born | Patrick Joseph Buchanan November 2, 1938 Washington, D.C., U.S. |
Political party | Republican (before 1999, 2004–present) |
Other political affiliations | Reform (1999–2002) |
Spouse(s) | Shelley Ann Scarney ( m. 1971) |
Education | Georgetown University (BA) Columbia University (MA) |
Website | Official website |
He co-founded The American Conservative magazine and launched a foundation named The American Cause.[2] He has been published in Human Events, National Review, The Nation, and Rolling Stone. He was a political commentator on the MSNBC cable network, including the show Morning Joe until February 2012, later appearing on Fox News. Buchanan was also a regular panelist on The McLaughlin Group. His political positions can generally be described as paleoconservative,[3] and many of his views, particularly his opposition to American imperialism and the managerial state, echo those of the Old Right Republicans of the first half of the 20th century.
Early life
Buchanan was born in Washington, D.C., a son of William Baldwin Buchanan (August 13, 1905, in Virginia – January 1988 in Washington, D.C.), a partner in an accounting firm, and his wife Catherine Elizabeth (Crum) Buchanan (December 23, 1911, in Charleroi, Washington County, Pennsylvania – September 18, 1995, in Oakton, Fairfax County, Virginia), a nurse and a homemaker.[4][5] Buchanan had six brothers (Brian, Henry, James, John, Thomas, and William Jr.) and two sisters (Kathleen Theresa and Angela Marie, nicknamed Bay). Bay served as U.S. Treasurer under Ronald Reagan. His father was of Irish, English, and Scottish ancestry, and his mother was of German descent.[4][6] He had a great-grandfather who fought in the American Civil War in the Confederate States Army, which is why he is a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans.[7] He admires Robert E. Lee, Douglas MacArthur and Joseph McCarthy.[8]
Of his southern ancestry, Buchanan has written:
I have family roots in the South, in Mississippi. When the Civil War came, Cyrus Baldwin enlisted and did not survive Vicksburg. William Buchanan of Okolona, who would marry Baldwin's daughter, fought at Atlanta and was captured by General Sherman. William Baldwin Buchanan was the name given to my father and by him to my late brother. As a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, I have been to their gatherings. I spoke at the 2001 SCV convention in Lafayette, LA. The Military Order of the Stars and Bars presented me with a battle flag and a wooden canteen like the ones my ancestors carried.[9]
Buchanan was born into a Catholic family and attended Catholic schools, including the Jesuit-run Gonzaga College High School. As a student at Georgetown University, he was in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) but did not complete the program. He earned his bachelor's degree in English from Georgetown, and received his draft notice after he graduated in 1960. The District of Columbia draft board exempted Buchanan from military service because of reactive arthritis, classifying him as 4-F. He received a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University in 1962, writing his thesis on the expanding trade between Canada and Cuba.[10]
Career
St. Louis Globe-Democrat editorial writer
Buchanan joined the St. Louis Globe-Democrat at age 23. During the first year of the United States embargo against Cuba in 1961, Canada–Cuba trade tripled. The Globe-Democrat published a rewrite of Buchanan's Columbia master's project under the eight-column banner "Canada sells to Red Cuba — And Prospers" eight weeks after Buchanan started at the paper. According to Buchanan's memoir Right from the Beginning, this article was a career milestone. Buchanan later said the embargo strengthened the communist regime and he turned against it.[11] Buchanan was promoted to assistant editorial page editor in 1964 and supported Barry Goldwater's presidential campaign. The Globe-Democrat did not endorse Goldwater and Buchanan speculated there was a clandestine agreement between the paper and President Lyndon B. Johnson. Buchanan recalled: "The conservative movement has always advanced from its defeats ... I can't think of a single conservative who was sorry about the Goldwater campaign."[8] According to the foreword (written by Pat Buchanan) in the most recent edition of Conscience of a Conservative, Buchanan was a member of the Young Americans for Freedom and wrote press releases for that organization. He served as an executive assistant in the Nixon, Mudge, Rose, Guthrie, Alexander, and Mitchell law offices in New York City in 1965.
Work for the Nixon White House
The next year, he was the first adviser hired by Nixon's presidential campaign;[12] he worked primarily as an opposition researcher. The highly partisan speeches Buchanan wrote were consciously aimed at Richard Nixon's dedicated supporters, for which his colleagues soon nicknamed him Mr. Inside.[13] Buchanan traveled with Nixon throughout the campaigns of 1966 and 1968. He made a tour of Western Europe, Africa and, in the immediate aftermath of the Six-Day War, the Middle East.
During the course of Nixon's presidency, Buchanan became a trusted on press relations, policy positions, and political strategy.[14] Early on during Nixon's presidency, Buchanan worked as a White House assistant and speechwriter for Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew. Buchanan coined the phrase "Silent Majority," and helped shape the strategy that drew millions of Democrats to Nixon. In a 1972 memo, he suggested the White House "should move to re-capture the anti-Establishment tradition or theme in American politics."[15] His daily assignments included developing political strategy, publishing the President's Daily News Summary, and preparing briefing books for news conferences. He accompanied Nixon on his trip to China in 1972 and the summit in Moscow, Yalta and Minsk in 1974. He suggested that Nixon label Democratic opponent George McGovern an extremist and burn the White House tapes.[16]
Buchanan remained as a special assistant to Nixon through the final days of the Watergate scandal. He was not accused of wrongdoing, though some mistakenly suspected him of being Deep Throat. In 2005 when the actual identity of the press leak was revealed as Federal Bureau of Investigation Associate Director Mark Felt, Buchanan called him "sneaky," "dishonest" and "criminal."[17] Because of his role in the Nixon campaign's "attack group," Buchanan appeared before the Senate Watergate Committee on September 26, 1973. He told the panel: "The mandate that the American people gave to this president and his administration cannot, and will not, be frustrated or repealed or overthrown as a consequence of the incumbent tragedy".[16]
When Nixon resigned in 1974, Buchanan briefly stayed on as special assistant under incoming President Gerald Ford. Chief of Staff Alexander Haig offered Buchanan his choice of three open ambassador posts, including South Africa, for which Buchanan opted. President Ford initially signed off on the appointment, but then rescinded it after it was prematurely reported in the Evans-Novak Political Report and caused controversy, especially among the U.S. diplomatic corps.[18]
Buchanan remarked about Watergate: "The lost opportunity to move against the political forces frustrating the expressed national will ... To effect a political counterrevolution in the capital — ... there is no substitute for a principled and dedicated man of the Right in the Oval Office".[16]
Long after his resignation, Nixon called Buchanan a confidant and said he was neither a racist nor an antisemite nor a bigot or "hater," but a "decent, patriotic American." Nixon said Buchanan had "some strong views," such as his "isolationist" foreign policy, with which he disagreed. While Nixon did not think Buchanan should become president, he said the commentator "should be heard."[19][20] However, according to a memo President Nixon sent to John Ehrlichman in 1970, Nixon characterized Buchanan's attitude towards integration as "segregation forever".[21] Following Nixon's re-election in 1972, Buchanan himself had written in a memo to Nixon suggesting he should not "fritter away his present high support in the nation for an ill-advised governmental effort to forcibly integrate races."[22]
News commentator
Buchanan returned to his column and began regular appearances as a broadcast host and political commentator. He co-hosted a three-hour daily radio show with liberal columnist Tom Braden called the Buchanan-Braden Program. He delivered daily commentaries on NBC radio from 1978 to 1984. Buchanan started his TV career as a regular on The McLaughlin Group and CNN's Crossfire (inspired by Buchanan-Braden) and The Capital Gang, making him nationally recognizable. His several stints on Crossfire occurred between 1982 and 1999; his sparring partners included Braden, Michael Kinsley, Geraldine Ferraro, and Bill Press.
Buchanan was a regular panelist on The McLaughlin Group. He appeared most Sundays alongside John McLaughlin and the more liberal Newsweek journalist Eleanor Clift. His columns are syndicated nationally by Creators Syndicate.[23]
Work for the Reagan White House
Buchanan served as White House Communications Director from February 1985 to March 1987.[24] In a speech to the National Religious Broadcasters in 1986, Buchanan said of the Reagan administration: "Whether President Reagan has charted a new course that will set our compass for decades—or whether history will see him as the conservative interruption in a process of inexorable national decline—is yet to be determined".[16]
A year later, he remarked that "the greatest vacuum in American politics is to the right of Ronald Reagan."[16] While her brother was working for Reagan, Bay Buchanan started a "Buchanan for President" movement in June 1986. She said the conservative movement needed a leader, but Buchanan was initially ambivalent.[16] After leaving the White House, he returned to his column and Crossfire. Out of respect for Jack Kemp he sat out the 1988 race, although Kemp later became his adversary.[15]
Central Park Five
In a 1989 column, Buchanan called for the lynching of a 16-year old black teenager and the horsewhipping of four other younger African-American and Hispanic teenagers for having allegedly raped a white jogger in the Central Park Five case. He also called for the civilization of "barbarians" by putting the "fear of death" in them. Robert C. Smith, professor of political science at San Francisco State University, characterized the column as racist.[25] Although the five teenagers were convicted; in 2002 the actual perpetrator of the crime confessed and DNA testing showed that he was guilty, and the convictions for the five teenagers were overturned.[26][27]
Accusations of antisemitism and Holocaust denial
Buchanan wrote that it was impossible for 850,000 Jews to be killed by diesel exhaust fed into the gas chamber at Treblinka in a 1990 column for the New York Post.[28] Buchanan once argued Treblinka "was not a death camp but a transit camp used as a 'pass-through point' for prisoners". In fact, some 900,000 Jews died at Treblinka.[29] When George Will challenged him on the issue on TV in December 1991, Buchanan did not reply.[30] In the same month, a 40,000-word article by William F. Buckley Jr. was published in the National Review discussing antisemitism among conservative commentators focused largely on Buchanan; the article and many responses to it were collected in the book In Search of Anti-Semitism (1992). He concluded: "I find it impossible to defend Pat Buchanan against the charge that what he did and said during the period under examination amounted to anti-Semitism."[30][31]
The Anti-Defamation League has called Buchanan an "unrepentant bigot" who "repeatedly demonizes Jews and minorities and openly affiliates with white supremacists."[32] "There's no doubt," said conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer, "he makes subliminal appeals to prejudice." He added: "The interesting thing is how he can say these things and still be considered a national figure."[22] Buchanan denies that he is antisemitic, and some of his fellow journalists, including Murray Rothbard,[33] Jack Germond, Al Hunt and Mark Shields, have defended him against the charge.[34] As a member of the Reagan White House, he is accused of having suppressed the Reagan Justice Department's investigation into Nazi scientists brought to America by the OSS's Operation Paperclip.[35] In the context of the Gulf War, on September 15, 1990, Buchanan appeared on The McLaughlin Group and said that "there are only two groups that are beating the drums for war in the Middle East – the Israeli defense ministry and its 'amen corner' in the United States." He also said: "The Israelis want this war desperately because they want the United States to destroy the Iraqi war machine. They want us to finish them off. They don't care about our relations with the Arab world."[36] Furthermore, on The McLaughlin Group Buchanan has also made such comments as "'Capitol Hill is Israeli occupied territory".[37] Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel in September 1990 said Buchanan "leaves the memory of Jewish victims in such disdain; a man who always takes the side of those accused of being killers; a man who is constantly criticizing Israel; a man who always has something nasty to say about the Jewish people".[38]
Buchanan supported President Reagan's plan to visit a German military cemetery at Bitburg in 1985, where among buried Wehrmacht soldiers were the graves of 48 Waffen SS members. At the insistence of German Chancellor Helmut Kohl and over the vocal objections of Jewish groups, the trip went through.[39] In a 1992 interview, Elie Wiesel described attending a White House meeting of Jewish leaders about the trip: "The only one really defending the trip was Pat Buchanan, saying, 'We cannot give the perception of the President being subjected to Jewish pressure.'"[40] Buchanan accused Wiesel of fabricating the story in an ABC interview in 1992: "I didn't say it and Elie Wiesel wasn't even in the meeting ... That meeting was held three weeks before the Bitburg summit was held. If I had said that, it would have been out of there within hours and on the news".[41]
Political career
1992 presidential primaries
In 1990, Buchanan published a newsletter called Patrick J. Buchanan: From the Right; it sent subscribers a bumper sticker reading: "Read Our Lips! No new taxes."[42]
In 1992, Buchanan explained his reasons for challenging the incumbent, President George H.W. Bush:
If the country wants to go in a liberal direction, if the country wants to go in the direction of [Democrats] George Mitchell and Tom Foley, it doesn't bother me as long as I've made the best case I can. What I can't stand are the back-room deals. They're all in on it, the insider game, the establishment game—this is what we're running against.[8]
He ran on a platform of immigration reduction and social conservatism, including opposition to multiculturalism, abortion, and gay rights. Buchanan challenged Bush (whose popularity was waning) when he won 38% of the New Hampshire primary. In the primary elections, Buchanan garnered three million total votes or 23% of the vote.
Buchanan later threw his support behind Bush and delivered an address at the 1992 Republican National Convention, which became known as the culture war speech, in which he described "a religious war going on in our country for the soul of America."[43] In the speech, he said of Bill and Hillary Clinton:
The agenda Clinton & Clinton would impose on America—abortion on demand, a litmus test for the Supreme Court, homosexual rights, discrimination against religious schools, women in combat units—that's change, all right. But it is not the kind of change America needs. It is not the kind of change America wants. And it is not the kind of change we can abide in a nation we still call God's country.[44]
Buchanan also said, in reference to the then recently-held 1992 Democratic National Convention, "Like many of you last month, I watched that giant masquerade ball at Madison Square Garden—where 20,000 radicals and liberals came dressed up as moderates and centrists—in the greatest single exhibition of cross-dressing in American political history." [45]
The enthusiastic applause he received prompted his detractors to claim that the speech alienated moderates from the Bush-Quayle ticket.[46] The newspaper columnist Molly Ivins wrote: "Many people did not care for Pat Buchanan's speech; it probably sounded better in the original German."[47]
Off the campaign trail
Buchanan returned to his column and Crossfire. To promote the principles of federalism, traditional values, and anti-intervention, he founded The American Cause, a conservative educational foundation, in 1993. Bay Buchanan serves as the Vienna, VA-based foundation's president and Pat is its chairman.[48]
Buchanan returned to radio as host of Buchanan and Company, a three-hour talk show for Mutual Broadcasting System on July 5, 1993. It pitted him against liberal co-hosts, including Barry Lynn, Bob Beckel, and Chris Matthews, in a time slot opposite Rush Limbaugh's show. To launch his 1996 campaign, Buchanan left the program on March 20, 1995.
1996 presidential primaries
Buchanan made another attempt to win the Republican nomination in the 1996 primaries. With Democratic President Bill Clinton seeking re-election, there was no incumbent Republican with a lock on the ticket. Indeed, with former President George H.W. Bush having made clear he was not interested in re-gaining the office, the closest the party had to a front-runner was Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas, the Senate Majority Leader, who was considered to have many weaknesses. Buchanan sought the Republican nomination from Dole's right, voicing his opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Other candidates for the nomination included Sen. Phil Gramm of Texas, former Tennessee Governor Lamar Alexander and the multi-millionaire publisher Steve Forbes.
In February, the liberal Center for Public Integrity issued a report claiming Buchanan's presidential campaign co-chairman, Larry Pratt, appeared at two meetings organized by white supremacist and militia leaders. Pratt denied any tie to racism, calling the report an orchestrated smear before the New Hampshire primary. Buchanan told the Manchester Union Leader he believed Pratt. Pratt took a leave of absence "to answer these charges," "so as not to have distraction in the campaign."[49]
Buchanan defeated Dole by about 3,000 votes to win the February New Hampshire primary. He was endorsed by conservative Phyllis Schlafly, among others. He won three other states (Alaska, Missouri, and Louisiana), and finished only slightly behind Dole in the Iowa caucus. His insurgent campaign used his soaring rhetoric to mobilize grass-roots right wing opinion against what he saw as the bland Washington establishment (personified by Dole) which he believed had controlled the party for years. At a rally later in Nashua, he said:
We shocked them in Alaska. Stunned them in Louisiana. Stunned them in Iowa. They are in a terminal panic. They hear the shouts of the peasants from over the hill. All the knights and barons will be riding into the castle pulling up the drawbridge in a minute. All the peasants are coming with pitchforks. We're going to take this over the top.[50]
In the Super Tuesday primaries Dole defeated Buchanan by large margins. Having collected only 21% of the total votes or 3.1 million in Republican primaries, Buchanan suspended his campaign in March. He declared that, if Dole were to choose a pro-choice running mate, he would run as the US Taxpayers Party (now Constitution Party) candidate.[51] Dole chose Jack Kemp and he received Buchanan's endorsement. After the 1996 campaign, Buchanan returned to his column and Crossfire. He also began a series of books with 1998's The Great Betrayal.
2000 presidential campaign
Buchanan announced his departure from the Republican Party in October 1999, disparaging them (along with the Democrats) as a "beltway party." He sought the nomination of the Reform Party. Many reformers backed Iowa physicist John Hagelin, whose platform was based on Transcendental Meditation. Party founder Ross Perot did not endorse either candidate for the Reform Party's nomination. (In late October 2000, Perot publicly endorsed George W. Bush, but Perot's 1996 running-mate, Pat Choate, would go on to endorse Buchanan.)
Supporters of Hagelin charged the results of the party's open primary, which favored Buchanan by a wide margin, were "tainted." The Reform Party divisions led to dual conventions being held simultaneously in separate areas of the Long Beach Convention Center complex. Both conventions' delegates ignored the primary ballots and voted to nominate their presidential candidates from the floor, similar to the Democratic and Republican conventions. One convention nominated Buchanan while the other backed Hagelin, with each camp claiming to be the legitimate Reform Party.
Ultimately, when the Federal Elections Commission ruled Buchanan was to receive ballot status as the Reform candidate, as well as about $12.6 million in federal campaign funds secured by Perot's showing in the 1996 election, Buchanan won the nomination. In his acceptance speech, Buchanan proposed US withdrawal from the United Nations and expelling the UN from New York, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, Department of Education, Department of Energy, Department of Housing and Urban Development, taxes on inheritance and capital gains, and affirmative action programs.
As his running mate, Buchanan chose African-American activist and retired teacher from Los Angeles, Ezola B. Foster. Buchanan was supported in this election run by future Socialist Party USA presidential candidate Brian Moore, who said in 2008 he supported Buchanan in 2000 because "he was for fair trade over free trade. He had some progressive positions that I thought would be helpful to the common man."[52] On August 19, the New York Right to Life Party, in convention, chose Buchanan as their nominee, with 90% of the districts voting for him.[53]
In a campaign speech at Bob Jones University in Greenville, South Carolina, Buchanan attempted to rally his conservative base:
God and the Ten Commandments have all been expelled from the public schools. Christmas carols are out. Christmas holidays are out. The latest decision of the United States Supreme Court said that children in stadiums or young people in high school games are not to speak an inspirational moment for fear they may mention God's name, and offend an atheist in the grandstand ... We may not succeed, but I believe we need a new fighting conservative traditionalist party in America. I believe, and I hope that one day we can take America back. That is why we are building this Gideon's army and heading for Armageddon, to do battle for the Lord. ...[54]
In the 2000 presidential election, Buchanan finished fourth with 449,895 votes, 0.4% of the popular vote. (Hagelin garnered 0.1% as the Natural Law candidate.) In Palm Beach County, Florida, Buchanan received 3,407 votes—which some saw as inconsistent with Palm Beach County's liberal leanings, its large Jewish population and his showing in the rest of the state. As a result of the county's now-infamous "butterfly ballot", he is suspected to have gained thousands of inadvertent votes. Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer stated, "Palm Beach county is a Pat Buchanan stronghold and that's why Pat Buchanan received 3,407 votes there." Reform Party officials strongly disagreed, estimating the number of supporters in the county at between 400 and 500. Appearing on The Today Show, Buchanan said: "When I took one look at that ballot on Election Night ... it's very easy for me to see how someone could have voted for me in the belief they voted for Al Gore".[55]
Some observers said his campaign was aimed to spread his message beyond his white conservative and populist base, while his views had not changed.[56]
Later political involvement
Following the 2000 election, Reform Party members urged Buchanan to take an active role within the party. Buchanan declined, though he did attend their 2001 convention. In the next few years, he identified himself as a political independent, choosing not to align himself with what he viewed as the neo-conservative Republican party leadership. Prior to the 2004 election, Buchanan announced he once again identified himself as a Republican, declared that he had no interest in ever running for president again, and reluctantly endorsed Bush's 2004 re-election, writing: "Bush is right on taxes, judges, sovereignty, and values. Kerry is right on nothing".[57]
Buchanan also endorsed Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney in 2012, stating in an article that "Obama offers more of the stalemate America has gone through for the past two years" while "Romney alone offers a possibility of hope and change."[58]
Buchanan supported the nomination of Donald Trump, who ran on many of the same positions that Buchanan ran on twenty years prior, as Republican presidential candidate for the 2016 presidential election.[59][60]
Later media activities
MSNBC commentator
Although CNN decided not to take him back, Buchanan's column resumed.[61] A longer variation of the Crossfire format was aired by MSNBC as Buchanan and Press on July 15, 2002, reuniting Buchanan and Press. Billed as "the smartest hour on television", Buchanan and Press featured the duo interviewing guests and sparring about the top news stories. As the Iraq War loomed, Buchanan and Press toned down their rivalry, as they both opposed the invasion.[62] Press claims they were the first cable hosts to discuss the planned attack.[63] MSNBC Editor-in-Chief Jerry Nachman once jokingly lamented this unusual situation:
So the point is why does only Fox [News Channel] get this? At least, we work at the perfect place, the place that's fiercely independent. We try to have balance by putting you two guys together and then this Stockholm syndrome love fest set in between the two of you, and we no longer even have robust debate.[64]
Just hours after his talk show debuted, Buchanan was a guest on the premiere of MSNBC's ill-fated Donahue program. Host Phil Donahue and Buchanan debated the separation of church and state. Buchanan called Donahue "dictatorial"[65] and said that the host got his job through affirmative action.[66]
MSNBC President Eric Sorenson canceled Buchanan and Press on November 26, 2003.[62] Buchanan stayed at MSNBC as a political analyst. He regularly appeared on the network's talk shows. He occasionally filled in on the nightly show Scarborough Country during its run on MSNBC. Buchanan also was a frequent guest and co-host of Morning Joe as well as Hardball and The Rachel Maddow Show.
In September 2009, MSNBC removed a Buchanan opinion column defending Hitler from its website after it was urged to do so in a public statement by the National Jewish Democratic Council.[67] Buchanan had used the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the German invasion of Poland to argue that Britain should not have declared war on Germany.[68][69] This revived charges of antisemitism and helping to legitimize Holocaust denial.
In October 2011, Buchanan was indefinitely suspended from MSNBC as a contributor after publication of his controversial book Suicide of a Superpower. One of the chapters in the book is titled, "The End of White America."[70] The minority advocacy group Color of Change had urged MSNBC to fire him over alleged racist slurs.[71] It was announced on February 16, 2012 that MSNBC's connection with Buchanan had ended.[72]
The American Conservative magazine
In 2002, to start a new magazine featuring traditional conservative viewpoints on the economy, immigration and foreign policy, Buchanan joined with former New York Post editorial page editor Scott McConnell and journalist Taki Theodoracopulos. The American Conservative's first issue was dated October 7, 2002.
Personal life
Buchanan married White House staffer Shelley Ann Scarney in 1971.[73] Their longtime tabby cat, Gipper, was named after the nickname of U.S. President Ronald Reagan, and reportedly sat on Buchanan's lap during staff meetings.[74][75] Buchanan identifies as a Traditionalist Catholic who attends Mass in the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite,[76] and strongly defended Summorum Pontificum.[77]
Electoral history
Publications
Books
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (1973), The New Majority: President Nixon at Mid-Passage, OCLC 632575.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (1975), Conservative Votes, Liberal Victories: Why the Right Has Failed, ISBN 0-8129-0582-2.
- Right from the Beginning, Boston: Little, Brown, December 25, 1988, ISBN 0-316-11408-1.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (1998), The Great Betrayal: How American Sovereignty and Social Justice Are Being Sacrificed to the Gods of the Global Economy, ISBN 0-316-11518-5.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (1999), A Republic, Not an Empire: Reclaiming America's Destiny, ISBN 0-89526-272-X.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (2002), The Death of the West: How Dying Populations and Immigrant Invasions Imperil Our Country and Civilization, New York, NY, USA: St. Martin's Press, ISBN 0-312-28548-5.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (2004), Where the Right Went Wrong: How Neoconservatives Subverted the Reagan Revolution and Hijacked the Bush Presidency, ISBN 0-312-34115-6.
- Buchanan, Patrick J., State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and Conquest of America. New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2006. ISBN 0312360037. Full text available.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (November 27, 2007), Day of Reckoning: How Hubris, Ideology, and Greed Are Tearing America Apart, ISBN 978-0-312-37696-3.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (May 27, 2008), Churchill, Hitler, and The Unnecessary War: How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the World, New York: Crown, ISBN 978-0-307-40515-9.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (October 18, 2011), Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?, ISBN 978-0-312-57997-5.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (January 1, 2014), The Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose from Defeat to Create the New Majority, ISBN 978-0-553-41863-7.
- Buchanan, Patrick J. (May 9, 2017), Nixon's White House Wars: The Battles That Made and Broke a President and Divided America Forever, ISBN 978-1101902844.
Major speeches
- 1992 Republican National Convention keynote, August 17, 1992
- The Cultural War for the Soul of America, September 14, 1992
- 1996 campaign announcement, March 20, 1995
- 1996 campaign speech, Georgia primary stump speech February 29, 1996
- Free Trade, Chicago Council on Foreign Relations speech November 18, 1998
- 2000 campaign announcement, March 2, 1999
- A Time for Truth about China, Commonwealth Club speech April 5, 1999
- To Reunite a Nation, Richard Nixon Library speech on immigration January 18, 2000
- 2000 Reform Party nomination acceptance, August 12, 2000
- Death of The West, Commonwealth Club speech January 14, 2002
Selected articles
- A Lesson in Tyranny Too Soon Forgotten (column), August 25, 1977.
- 'Ivan The Terrible' – More Doubts (column), Real Change, March 17, 1990.
- Ghostbusting the Smoot-Hawley Ogre (column), October 20, 1993.
- Time for Economic Nationalism, June 12, 1995, archived from the original (column) on October 8, 2008.
- "Response to Norman Podhoretz", The Wall Street Journal, November 5, 1999, archived from the original (letter) on May 11, 2008.
- The Sad Suicide of Admiral Nimitz (column), January 18, 2002.
- True Fascists of the New Europe (column), April 30, 2002.
- "Whose War?", American Conservative, March 24, 2003, archived from the original on January 5, 2009.
- "The Death of Manufacturing", American Conservative, August 11, 2003, archived from the original on July 20, 2008, retrieved September 2, 2006.
- "The Death of the West", NBC News (book excerpt), MSN, October 30, 2003.
- The Aggressors in the Culture Wars (column), March 8, 2004.
- What Do We Offer the World? (column), May 19, 2004.
- Where are the Christians? (column), July 18, 2006.
- PJB: A Brief For Whitey, March 21, 2008, archived from the original (column) on August 22, 2008.
- Blowback From Bear Baiting (column), August 15, 2008.
- Several years archives (newspaper columns), The American cause, September 2008 – May 2008.
Interviews
- Chu, Jefferson 'Jeff' (August 20, 2006), "Ten Questions for Pat Buchanan", Time.
- Hannity; Colmes (August 22, 2006), "Pat Buchanan Defends Controversial Immigration Comments", News, Fox, archived from the original (partial transcript) on May 14, 2011, retrieved January 27, 2019.
- Kauffman, William 'Bill' (July–August 1998), "Is This the Face of the Twenty-First Century?", The American Enterprise, archived from the original on January 5, 2006.
- Lamb, Brian (May 17, 1998), "Buchanan on The Great Betrayal", Booknotes, archived from the original (interview) on November 8, 2011.
- Lydon, Christopher, "Republicans: Whitman, Buchanan and Terror", Open Source (public radio show audio).
- Slen, Peter. In Depth with Pat Buchanan. C-SPAN, May 2, 2010.
- Pat Buchanan discusses his book State of Emergency, Book TV, August 24, 2006, archived from the original (video) on September 27, 2007.
- Alberta, Tim (April 22, 2017), "The Ideas Made It, But I Didn't", Politico Magazine, retrieved April 24, 2017.
See also
References
- "Pat Buchanan | Biography & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved June 7, 2018.
- Foley, Michael (2007). American credo: the place of ideas in US politics. US: Oxford University Press. p. 318. ISBN 978-0-19-923267-3.
- "Unpatriotic Conservatives" Archived January 8, 2010, at the Wayback Machine David Frum, April 7, 2003, National Review.
- Reitwiesner, William Addams; Moran, Nolan Kent; Otto, Julie Helen. "The Ancestry of Pat Buchanan". Wargs. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- "Pat Buchanan Biography". Notable Biographies. Thomson Gale. Retrieved November 1, 2006.
- "Index to Politicians:Buchanan". The Political Graveyard. Retrieved August 8, 2013.
- Buchanan, Patrick 'Pat' Joseph (November 26, 2003), "Why Do the Neocons Hate Dixie So?", The American Cause, Patrick 'Pat' Joseph Buchanan, retrieved June 13, 2010
- Allen, Henry (February 17, 1992). "The Iron Fist of Pat Buchanan". The Washington Post.
- Buchanan, Patrick 'Pat' Joseph (December 1, 2003). "Why Do They Hate Dixie?". The American Conservative. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
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(help) - quoted by Crossfire, CNN, February 24, 1992, Transcript # 514.
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Cut it out, Phil. What you want done is, I say no Jewish kid can be put in a Nativity play. What you want done is no Nativity play, no Pledge of Allegiance, no Bible in school, no Ten Commandments. You are dictatorial, Phil. You're a dictatorial liberal and you don't even know it
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External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pat Buchanan. |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Pat Buchanan |
Archives
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Patrick J. Buchanan Papers (White House Special Files) (1969-1972)
- Works by Patrick J. Buchanan at Internet Archive
- Works by Patrick J. Buchanan at LewRockwell.com
- Works by Patrick J. Buchanan at TheAmericanCause.org
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Michael McManus |
White House Director of Communications 1985–1987 |
Succeeded by Jack Koehler |
Party political offices | ||
Preceded by Ross Perot |
Reform nominee for President of the United States 2000 |
Succeeded by Ralph Nader |