Category Archives: Books/Reading

The rematch? More like the comeback

Earlier this week, President Biden and former President Trump sewed up their respective nominations seemingly setting up a rematch of or sequel to the 2020 election. I say “seemingly” because I posit that it’s still possible, and I think likely, that the Democrat replace Biden at the Democratic National Convention, but I digress.

With the presumptive nominees now set, the notion of “the rematch” deserves some attention. The country already got one 2020 repeat earlier this year, when the San Francisco 49ers took on the Kansas City Chiefs in the Super Bowl. That did not go as I had hoped with the outcome also repeating itself as the Chiefs hoisted the Lombardi Trophy. Between the football and politics, 2024 is seemingly on a path to being “déjà vu all over again,” as Yogi Berra would say.

But Trump’s 2024 return to the ballot to take on his 2020 challenger is more than just a rematch. Billing it simply as just one of now seven repeat matchups misses an important characteristic: Trump is a former president! In most of those previous instances, the “rematch” involved a non-president taking on the incumbent he lost against before. The closest thing the repeat candidates had to presidential experience was losing their previous shot at the presidency.

For example, the perennial presidential candidate of the early 20th Century, William Jennings Bryan, one of the “rematch” examples (having matched up against William McKinley twice, and lost), never had the privilege of running as a former president. To return to a football comparison, William Jennings Bryan is the 90s Buffalo Bills of presidential nominees. The Bills represented the AFC in four straight Super Bowls from XXV to XXVIII, and they proceeded to lose every single one to the NFC East. It’s not a perfect analogy, because the Democrats had the good sense to nominate someone other than Bryan in 1904, but it’s still an apt comparison. The Bills might have made it to “the big dance” several times, but they were never Super Bowl Champions. The same can be said of Bryan who was a three-time nominee who never ascended to the presidency.

Notably, the Trump-Biden rematch differs in that President Trump has been America’s chief executive before. For that reason, 2024 is better considered a presidential comeback! And for that, there is only one comparison–the 1896 presidential rematch between incumbent Benjamin Harrison and former president Grover Cleveland, the outcome of which made President Cleveland the only nonconsecutive two-time president (so far).

With that, to prepare yourself for the upcoming election with a historical view, I recommend adding a Cleveland biography to your reading list. My choice, and a book I began reading this week, is A Man of Iron: The Turbulent Life and Improbable Presidency of Grover Cleveland by Troy Senik.

Alternatively, Allan Nevins’ 1933 Pulitzer Prize winning two-volume biography Grover Cleveland: A Study in Courage, which I read in 2022 in anticipation of this probability, is also a great choice.

To the Loss of the Presidency (Grover Cleveland a Study in Courage, Vol. 1) on Amazon: https://a.co/d/gsGMcFz
To the End of a Career (Grover Cleveland a Study in Courage, Vol. 2) on Amazon: https://a.co/d/gj1hLG7

A closing fun fact: Grover Cleveland was featured on the $1,000 bill.

Although the $1,000 has been discontinued, the level of inflation since Biden took office might be making the case for out-of-circulation, high denomination bills, like the McKinley ($500 bill) and the Cleveland ($1,000), to make their own comeback.

The High Cost of Good Intentions: A History of U.S. Federal Entitlement Programs

In fall of 2017 I started a new position as manager of external affairs for the Hoover Institution’s Washington, D.C. office. A primary function of the D.C. office is to, “promote the academic work of Hoover fellows and to facilitate the engagement of fellows in the policy conversations that take place in the nation’s capital.” To a large extent, this involves hosting Hoover fellows from California, and on November 1, 2017 the first fellow we hosted in my tenure with the organization was John F. Cogan, the author of The High Cost of Good Intentions: A History of U.S. Federal Entitlement Programs. It took me a while to read the book, but quality time flying across the country for my first visit to Stanford University in an official capacity was the perfect setting to accomplish the bulk of the reading. (It’s fitting that I finished the first book I received on the job during the flight for my first visit to the main office, but if we’re being honest, I really should have finished the book a few months ago – no judging please!)


The book’s central theme is that the creation of entitlements brings forth relentless forces that cause them to inexorably expand.


Continue reading The High Cost of Good Intentions: A History of U.S. Federal Entitlement Programs

Finally Got Back To Reading A Novel For Fun

For the longest time I’ve been so busy with either school or work that I haven’t had time to just sit and read for the enjoyment of reading. Of course I’ve been reading and it’s not to say that I haven’t enjoyed the material, but for the most part, the reading, be it a book or a paper, has either been assigned or directly related to work or some other project.

With my apartment complex pool opening just a few weeks ago I resolved to take the time on weekends to bask in the sun, getting my tan on while enjoying a good book.

First book on the list was Saving the Queen a Blackford Oakes novel by William F. Buckley.

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I actually began reading the book 2 summers ago, before I made the cross country trek from California to the Washington, D.C. metro area. After having so much time pass between start and finish it feels good to be done. The next book on the list is The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand so I won’t immediately be returning to the world of Blackford Oakes, but I hope to soon.

I found Saving the Queen a delightful read and am looking forward to reading Buckley’s other spy novels.

Highly recommended reading for anyone looking for a good novel.