The Unmaking of a Mayor. William F. Buckley Jr.
href="#ulink_418b64a1-dcb5-5a58-b53d-f78c0d563d8e">2. The Idea of Fusion
IV. LINDSAY, SPRING 1965
2. Lindsay as Moderate
3. Lindsay, Lincoln, and the GOP
4. Lindsay and Style
V. BUCKLEY, SPRING 1965
VI. RACE, RELIGION, AND POLITICS
(A) A PASTICHE
1. The Practicing Politician
2. Balancing the Ticket
3. The Sting of the WASP
4. Will the Real Catholic Stand Up?
5. Is Moynihan a Racist?
6. Negroes, Crime, and Police
7. Negroes, Demagogy, and the “Backlash”
8. “What Exactly Did You Say?”
9. On Stirring Race against Race—Part I
10. Only Brutes Have Brutish Instincts
11. On Stirring Race against Race—Part II
(B) MANIPULATING THE JEWISH VOTE
VII. THE POSITION PAPERS
1. Why the Drought?
2. A Vicious Cycle
3. Whatever Became of Education?
4. The High Price of Mismanagement
5. The New Business Tax
6. In New York, It Pays
7. Opportunity for Liberation
8. Where Is the Government Hiding?
9. Narcotics Is a Plague
10. The Key Is Experimentation
VIII. THE CANDIDATE AND “HIS SUPPORTERS”
IX. NOTES (AFTER THE FACT) FROM A DIARY (NEVER WRITTEN)
1. Headquarters
2. Beame Wins the Primary
3. Soft on Communism
4. General Pulaski
5. The Other Buckley
6. Epicene Demonstrators?
7. The Problem of Principle
8. Did You Know Lindsay at Yale?
9. On Reporters
10. “Fifty Bucks from Buckley”
11. The Debates
12. How to Get to LBJ
13. A Goldwater Operation?
X. THE CAMPAIGN
XI. ELECTION NIGHT
A Brief Afterword
A Longer Afterword, by Joe Scarborough
Appendix
Index
iiiiiiivvviviiviiiixxxixiixiiixivxvxvixviixviiixixxxxxixxii12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031