Reviews
developed a deeper understanding of what true self-governance means. It's a story that reminds us that our key founding principle--that in a democracy, everybody counts--is worth fighting for. And that it must be protected with constant vigilance.", Over the course of our country's history, our ability to live up to our founders' vision has been tested time and time again. J. Douglas Smith tells the story of the people who met one of the most critical of these tests. This is the story of citizens, elected leaders, activists, lawyers, and judges who, over time, developed a deeper understanding of what true self-governance means. It's a story that reminds us that our key founding principle--that in a democracy, everybody counts--is worth fighting for. And that it must be protected with constant vigilance., On Democracy's Doorstep is a superb account of the Supreme Court's critical 'one person, one vote' decision. It is thoroughly researched and beautifully written. Everyone who cares about American democracy will want to read this book., Smith is an accessible and knowledgeable storyteller . . . [He] provides a fascinating, behind-the-scenes look at how the Supreme Court came to decide the cases that came to shape our political system . . . there is much to enjoy in On Democracy's Doorstep 's detailed accounting of the creation of the principle of 'one person, one vote.', 'One person, one vote' lies at the heart of democracy. J. Douglas Smith tells the gripping story of how the U.S. Supreme Court boldly acted in the 1960s to bring that ideal closer to reality. And he unearths the first stirrings of backlash that augured today's polarized politics. A fascinating blend of political, legal, and social history., Over the course of our country's history, our ability to live up to our founders' vision has been tested time and time again. J. Douglas Smith tells the story of the people who met one of the most critical of these tests. This is the story of citizens, elected leaders, activists, lawyers, and judges who, over time,|9780809074242|, Smith's impressive research recaptures an otherwise unremembered chapter in U.S. history . . . On Democracy's Doorstep recounts a triumphant story of constitutional reform that dramatically advanced the promise of democracy., Today, the principle of 'one person, one vote' is fundamental to democracy--but it wasn't always so. On Democracy's Doorstep tells how the Supreme Court decided to enter the political thicket and create the modern law of democracy, and how a proposed constitutional amendment almost reversed the Court. In today's era of partisan gerrymandering and the overturning of the Voting Rights Act, this book could not be more timely and relevant., A topic as important and serious as voting deserves an important and serious book. This is it. J. Douglas Smith has done a masterful job of untangling the reapportionment thicket., As historian Smith ably demonstrates, beginning in the late 19th century, malapportionment--the uneven representation of constituents by lawmakers--became the most serious threat to political equality . . . Smith takes a novel angle and writes with a light touch., [On Democracy's Doorstep] is invaluable for anyone who wishes to understand the court, especially those who aren't familiar with legal jargon . . . Smith gives us the knowledge that imparts the power to change and, more importantly, the hope that it can succeed., 'One man, one vote' is the bedrock of American democracy, yet it was not always that way. J. Douglas Smith's On Democracy Doorstep is the scintillating account of how that doctrine became the law of the land during the 1960s. This is not only a great work of historical scholarship, but a page-turner as well. With Smith's unparalleled knowledge of history in the making, we are led on a constitutional odyssey: to the strategy sessions of Robert Kennedy's Justice Department, the inner deliberations of Earl Warren's Supreme Court, and the clash of legal titans in their oral arguments before the Court. Smith describes as never before the network of young and idealistic lawyers around the United States who championed the cause of reapportionment as a vital bulwark of democracy. My father, Theodore Sachs, was one of them, and Smith brilliantly describes the passions, ideas, and drama of the great constitutional battle that I witnessed as a young boy. This is the definitive account of one of the epochal decisions of the US Supreme Court, one that Chief Justice Earl Warren himself regarded as 'the most vital' of his era., On Democracy's Doorstep is the compelling story of how a president and a Supreme Court rescued American democracy a half century ago--a vitally important book for our democracy's new age of crisis., J. Douglas Smith's On Democracy's Doorstep is the definitive legal whodunit about the creation of the 'one person, one vote' standard. Smith reminds us--now when it's vitally important to recall it--that the doctrine was neither obvious nor certain, and that a colorful, interconnected crew of country lawyers, litigation experts, journalists, and justices toiled for years to bring it into existence., "Smith's impressive research recaptures an otherwise unremembered chapter in U.S. history . . . On Democracy's Doorstep recounts a triumphant story of constitutional reform that dramatically advanced the promise of democracy." -David Garrow, The Washington Post, A fascinating account of a crucial yet little-known chapter in American history, On Democracy's Doorstep is a meticulously reported, thoughtfully written inside story of the momentous legal doctrine that profoundly shaped American politics.