Reihan Salam
Author of Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream
About the Author
Image credit: By Larry D. Moore, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5208037
Works by Reihan Salam
Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream (2008) — Author — 95 copies, 5 reviews
Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders (2018) 49 copies, 2 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
There is no Common Knowledge data for this author yet. You can help.
Members
Reviews
Melting Pot or Civil War?: A Son of Immigrants Makes the Case Against Open Borders (English Edition) by Reihan Salam
Salam is a so-called "reform conservative" who, in this book takes a look at immigration. By saying that he is the son of immigrants, he seems to feel particularly entitled to propose limits on immigrants to the USA. That said, he manages to lay out a conservative proposal on immigration reform that should be an acceptable start for a bipartisan discussion.
Having just finished Paul Collier's book on immigration ("Exodus"), I found the Salam book to be rather shallow. In contrast to Collier show more who takes an even-handed approach to the subject citing in detail studies from all sides of the issue, Salam's quotes seem to be mostly quotes from opinion articles in conservative journals. He also seems to have selected the studies he looked at based upon which ones agreed best with his own opinion. In the end, much of the book felt like a collection of opinions more suitable to a short essay in one of his favorite journals. For that reason, I found the book disappointing. It was redeemed by its sincere appeal for finding a bipartisan solution to the problem. show less
Having just finished Paul Collier's book on immigration ("Exodus"), I found the Salam book to be rather shallow. In contrast to Collier show more who takes an even-handed approach to the subject citing in detail studies from all sides of the issue, Salam's quotes seem to be mostly quotes from opinion articles in conservative journals. He also seems to have selected the studies he looked at based upon which ones agreed best with his own opinion. In the end, much of the book felt like a collection of opinions more suitable to a short essay in one of his favorite journals. For that reason, I found the book disappointing. It was redeemed by its sincere appeal for finding a bipartisan solution to the problem. show less
Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream by Ross Douthat
The United States has a lot of problems. On occasion, someone might have a bright idea on how to solve those problems. This book, asserting it can fix all America’s problems, the GOP needs to offer an agenda that would help a pan-ethnic working class.
Unfortunately, it seems that the people most in need of reading this book have not done so. Arizona attempted to solve its immigration problem in the most nativist way possible, alienating the emergent Latin American cohort. Republicans in show more Congress are defending the ecocidal terrorism and corporate incompetence of British Petroleum, meanwhile blaming regulation as the culprit. (As if the United States political system has had no relationship with Big Oil.) Meanwhile the Family Values ethos wanes amidst the sexual hypocrisy of George Rekers, Ted Haggard, Mark Foley and Michael Steele. Clearly, the GOP is in need of some serious ideological triage. Then again, when the car’s totaled, you aren’t going to waste your time debating trim color.
http://www.joebobbriggs.com/index.php?/en/grand-new-party.html show less
Unfortunately, it seems that the people most in need of reading this book have not done so. Arizona attempted to solve its immigration problem in the most nativist way possible, alienating the emergent Latin American cohort. Republicans in show more Congress are defending the ecocidal terrorism and corporate incompetence of British Petroleum, meanwhile blaming regulation as the culprit. (As if the United States political system has had no relationship with Big Oil.) Meanwhile the Family Values ethos wanes amidst the sexual hypocrisy of George Rekers, Ted Haggard, Mark Foley and Michael Steele. Clearly, the GOP is in need of some serious ideological triage. Then again, when the car’s totaled, you aren’t going to waste your time debating trim color.
http://www.joebobbriggs.com/index.php?/en/grand-new-party.html show less
Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream by Ross Douthat
This book from 2008 tries to lay out a path forward for the Republican party that would allow them to win over the "Sams Club" Americans in the working class. It begins with a summary of initiatives since the New Deal concluding with several compliments for the policies of the George W Bush. It then concludes with policy proposals in a number of areas.
Reading this book eight years after it was published is revealing since virtually none of these proposals was adopted by the GOP. Instead, show more they turned themselves into the "Party of No" doing nothing to help any of their constituents outside of the 1%. The book is still worth reading, especially for Democrats since it includes some good starting points for policies in several areas. It can also serve as a call to action for Democrats to do more for Sams Club voters. show less
Reading this book eight years after it was published is revealing since virtually none of these proposals was adopted by the GOP. Instead, show more they turned themselves into the "Party of No" doing nothing to help any of their constituents outside of the 1%. The book is still worth reading, especially for Democrats since it includes some good starting points for policies in several areas. It can also serve as a call to action for Democrats to do more for Sams Club voters. show less
Some relatively well supported arguments for reforming immigration policy — specifically, amnesty combined with effective future enforcement, a points based system instead of primarily family unification, and some other reasonable modifications. Unfortunately none of this is at all likely to happen, and thus the negative consequences he identifies (that a long term underclass of relatively-excluded immigrants and their descendants will seize power and be resisted to the detriment of all) show more is more likely to come to pass. show less
Statistics
- Works
- 2
- Members
- 144
- Popularity
- #143,280
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 7



