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The Roads to Congress 2008

The Roads to Congress 2008( )
Editor: Dewhirst, Robert
Hechler, Ken
Watson, Robert P.
Contribution by: Ahuja, Sunil
Ashley, Jeffrey S.
Banyan, Margaret E.
Bergerson, Peter
Binning, William
Duffy, Robert J.
Foreman, Sean
Gelm, Richard
Godwin, Marcia
Kear, Andrew
Kraus, Jeffrey
Lansford, Tom
Lovecraft, Amy Lauren
McBeath, Gerald
Rausch Jr, John David
Roberts, Bob N.
Saunders, Kyle L.
Sinner, Justin
Smith, Dan
Stockley, Joshua
Watson, Robert P.
ISBN:978-0-7391-4211-0
Publication Date:Mar 2010
Publisher:Ebsco Publishing
Book Format:Digital (delivered electronically)
List Price:USD $80.00
Book Description:

The book offers lively and highly readable case studies of the most intriguing and important congressional races of 2008. Both House and Senate races are included and each case covers the same topics presented in the same order within the cases. This includes profiles of both candidates and the congressional district or state of the senate race, as well as a discussion of the main policy issues of the campaign, campaign strategy, media coverage of the candidates, interest group...
More Description

Author Biography
(Editor)
Kenneth William Hechler was born in Roslyn, New York on September 20, 1914. He received a bachelor's degree from Swarthmore College in 1935 and a doctorate in political science from Columbia University in 1940. He taught at Columbia College and Barnard College and took part in editing President Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidential papers before his wartime service as an Army officer. He was a combat historian who visited the European battlefronts of World War II and interrogated high-ranking Nazis before the Nuremberg war-crime trials. His book, The Bridge at Remagen, was published in 1957. It was adapted into a movie in 1969. After the war, Hechler held an administrative post in the Bureau of the Budget and taught politics at Princeton University. He worked as a speechwriter and researcher for President Harry S. Truman from 1949 to 1953.

He was teaching government at Marshall College when he decided to run for Congress. He served nine terms in the House of Representatives where he fought to improve safety standards in coal mines, provide health benefits for miners with lung disease, and curb strip mining as a despoiler of the environment and a threat to water supplies. After leaving Congress, he was West Virginia's secretary of state from 1985 to 2001. He died from a stroke on December 10, 2016 at the age of 102.

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