PART ONE: Backdrop
Chapter One: 'Out for Blood'
Chapter Two: The Revolutionaries of Grand Central and Columbia
Chapter Three: Chicago '68
Chapter Four: Two Moratorium Days
Chapter Five: 'Law and Order' and the Decline of Cities
Chapter Six: Consequences, 'Law and Order' and the Decline of
Cities
Chapter Seven: Blue-Collar Whites Are 'Rediscovered' (in Middle
American Gotham)
Chapter Eight: Those Who Did the Fighting and Dying
Chapter Nine: The New Left and the 'Great Test for Liberals'
Chapter Ten: Building the Twin Towers, Ethnic New York, and
Race
Chapter Eleven: Cambodia and Kent State
Chapter Twelve: Kent State in New York
PART TWO: 'Bloody Friday'
Chapter Thirteen: 'U-S-A. All the way!'
Chapter Fourteen: Melee
Chapter Fifteen: 'About Time the Silent Majority Made Some
Noise'
Chapter Sixteen: Violence Becomes 'Contagious'
Chapter Seventeen: 'We've Lost Control!'
Chapter Eighteen: The Riot Spreads
Chapter Nineteen: 'I'm Not Having City Hall Taken Over on My
Watch'
Chapter Twenty: Full Circle to Federal Hall
PART THREE: AFTERWARD AND AFTERMATH
Chapter Twenty-One: The Days After: Knicks Utopia, a Fraught City,
and Nixon at the Brink
Chapter Twenty-Two: The Riot Reverberates
Chapter Twenty- Three: 'Workers' Woodstock'
Chapter Twenty-Four: 'Our People Now,' Nixon Sees an Un-Silent
Majority
Chapter Twenty-Five: Honor America day
Chapter Twenty-Six: 'Born with a Potmetal Spoon,' on Nixon's
Blue-Collar Strategy
Chapter Twenty-Seven: How America(s) Saw It
Chapter Twenty-Eight: The End of the Beginning
David Paul Kuhn is an author, reporter, and political analyst. He
has served as a senior and chief political writer across the
political-media landscape, from Politico to RealClearPolitics to
CBS News, as well as written for the New York Times, the Washington
Post Magazine, the Wall Street Journal, the Atlantic, National
Review, New Republic, and the Los Angeles Times, among other
publications, and regularly appears on networks ranging from BBC to
Fox News. He is the author of the political novel What Makes It
Worthy.
"David Paul Kuhn tells the story in marvellous detail." -- Timothy
D. Lusch, Chronicles
"Riveting." --Jill Lepore, The New Yorker
"Engrossing, well-crafted, The Hardhat RiotEL argues persuasively
that the riot sparked a vast national political shift driven by a
widening divide between the working class and the educated elite
that has led to the era of the Trump presidency... Kuhn writes with
empathy for both sides... Kuhn's accounts of the violence are vivid
and raw... The author concludes with a sharp analysis of how the
revolt of the White working class almost immediately
reshaped American politics, beginning with Nixon's opportunistic
claim of blue-collar Whites as "Silent Majority" supporters of his
law-and-order presidency. Kuhn shows the reverberations over the
decades, right up
to the making of Donald Trump's political base... Kuhn argues that
class divisions have driven people so far apart that it's as if
Americans now live in 'entirely different places, even if they are
still called by one name--America.'"
--The Washington Post Book Review
"Perhaps the best book ever on how Democrats lost the white working
class. The Hardhat Riot is a great read, but also a must-read to
understand the voters that Democrats neglected at their own
peril."
--James Carville, former Chief Strategist for President Bill
Clinton
"Over the past 15 years few writers have covered this realignment
with the consistency of David Paul Kuhn, whose warnings about the
reasons white working people were moving away from the Democrats
were largely dismissed by the news media and party elites... Mr.
Kuhn remained an unacknowledged prophet... Now he has synthesized
his message with a lesson from history: The Hardhat Riot, a
riveting account of... [a] clash on the streets of New York
[that]
came to symbolize the irreconcilable division taking shape in the
rest of the country... Mr. Kuhn avoids polemics and judgment, yet
leads the reader to understand the deeper questions implicit in so
many of
today's political debates... The Hardhat Riot insightfully explains
why and how this happened. Perhaps the Democratic Party's leaders
will finally understand what David Paul Kuhn has been trying to
tell them."
--Jim Webb, The Wall Street Journal Book Review
"The Hardhat Riot, by David Paul Kuhn, vividly evokes... a
blue-collar rampage whose effects still ripple, not the least of
them being Donald Trump's improbable ascension to the presidency...
this is a compelling narrative."
--The New York Times Book Review
"[An] outstanding new book... through dogged researchEL combining
eyewitness reports with his own gifted storytelling to craft a
riveting narrative. In our current intellectual climate, which
seems to prize tendentiousness, it is rare to find such a
clear-eyed and non-polemical work of history."
--National Review
"This is red-meat history with a hot splash of tabasco. David Paul
Kuhn brings to life a period that is not only fascinating in itself
but also illuminates the age of Donald Trump. If you want to
understand how blue-collar Americans came to feel so disparaged and
deplored, The Hardhat Riot is a great place to start. A truly
captivating read."
--Robert Guest, Foreign Editor, The Economist
"David Paul Kuhn's Hardhat Riot captures a seminal but
long-neglected turning point in the steady erosion of Democratic
support among the core of the New Deal Coalition. The May 8, 1970,
confrontation--AKA, 'Bloody Friday'--between anti-war protestors,
mostly students, and tough, unionized construction workers
determined to demonstrate their support of American troops in
Vietnam, marked the start of the split between a well-educated
elite and an
increasingly discontented working class, a split that overtime
produced the election of Donald Trump. This book is crucial for
anyone seeking to understand the politics of 2020 and beyond."
--Thomas B. Edsall, Contributing Opinion Writer, The New York
Times
"David Paul Kuhn's revealing new book... does two things remarkably
well. It reconstructs a detailed, compelling, and coherent
narrative of the riot, assembled from what must have seemed a
morass of contradictory sources. The book also provides critical
context for the riot, documenting the mounting alienation of the
white working class from the ascendant New Left, and arguing
convincingly for the Hardhat Riot not so much as the day that
turned the tide, but as
an unmistakable harbinger of political shifts in the offing, a
moment when unlikely symbols of Nixon's Silent Majority roared
back, giving voice to grievances that persist to this day."
--New York Journal of Books
"Vivid." --Ronald Brownstein, The Atlantic
"I picked up David Paul Kuhn's The Hardhat Riot with the intention
of skimming and found myself engrossed, reading every page.
Well-written, painstakingly researched, this is an important book
that gives life to history and explains the divorce between
working-class whites and the Democratic Party, and yet rarer still,
is also a real pleasure to read."
--Charlie Cook, Editor and Publisher of The Cook Political
Report
"President Trump's reelection bid rests as much as anything on the
political loyalty and fealty of his blue-collar base. That they're
such a factor in 2020 reflects one of the biggest shifts in
American politics over the last half-century-plus. David Paul Kuhn
explains why in his important new book . . . As an author, Kuhn was
in many ways prescient about the rise of Trump's coalition nearly a
decade before it happened . . . Kuhn's latest work explains in
elegant and expert fashion how he won so much support among
blue-collar white voters in the first place."
--Washington Examiner Book Review
"Hardhat Riot is an arresting and often chilling narrative of the
events that drove a wedge between white working-class voters and
the Democratic Party, setting America on the road to today's
right-wing populism. I couldn't stop reading it. If you want to
understand why cultural issues became central to our politics, read
this book."
--William Galston, former policy advisor to President Clinton and
Senior Fellow, the Brookings Institution
"Kuhn makes use of masterful, disturbing imagery to capture the
clash... his narration is candid... the perspectives of both sides
are shared without favoritism--only the facts. The text is
fascinating as it traces the political breakdown that became the
platform upon which Nixon built a new base... Hardhat Riot is a
timely review of a historical event that contains a reminder that
class divisions also create opportunities within politics."
--Foreword Reviews
"Trenchant... A welcome resurrection of a forgotten riot with
relevance for our current fragmented political landscape."
--Kirkus
"A gripping history of a moment when two visions of America
clashed--with fists flying--throughout the Wall Street district.
The Hardhat Riot excavates conflicts over protest politics,
American military power, and the party loyalties of the white
working class that remain with us half a century later."
--Beverly Gage, Professor of History and American Studies, Yale
University
"Sometimes events that are long forgotten have reverberations that
dominate our times. In Hardhat Riot, David Paul Kuhn skillfully
shows how the split between traditionally Democratic
constituencies--blue collar workers and militant students--eerily
foreshadows the bitter political splits of our time."
--Michael Barone, author of The Almanac of American Politics and
Emeritus Fellow, American Enterprise Institute
"David Paul Kuhn has breathed new life into an uproarious seminal
event in modern political history, skillfully tracing fault lines
running from the late 1960s up to the present. A timely, smart,
adrenalin-fueled account conveyed with you-are-there
immediacy."
--Laurence Bergreen, author of Over the Edge of the World
"David Paul Kuhn details, with much new research, the changing
political conditions before and after the spring of 1970, when
Nixon saw the opportunity after the May 8 Hardhat Riot. No previous
book has so convincingly documented how important this single event
was in changing the class base of both the Republican and
Democratic parties."
--Joan Hoff, former president of the Center for the Study of the
Presidency
"It's about how elitist politicians left white, blue-collar workers
feeling sold out. It's about how those lifelong Democrats--mostly
Catholic, ethnic, union--began looking for a new home in the
Republican Party. And it's about how that day changed American
politics, perhaps forever. Kuhn has written a lot about the white
working class, and he writes about the '60s here from its anguished
perspective. Blue-collar workers saw liberal legislators as
snobby,
spoiled young radicals. The workers felt demeaned, even demonized.
Finally, they demanded their own revolution."
--New York Daily News Book Review
"Largely through the microcosm of New York City, David Paul Kuhn's
The Hardhat Riot delves deeply into the estrangement of the
Democratic Party from America's blue-collar workers. For all of its
fascinating detail of the travails of America's metropolis, The
Hardhat Riot also offers a broad and rich panorama of American
politics of the past 50 years and the most persuasive explanation
for the rise of Donald Trump that has yet appeared."
--Ross K. Baker, Professor of American Government, Rutgers
University
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |