Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 216
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-0-7425-6270-7 • Paperback • February 2008 • $35.00 • (£30.00)
Allan J. Lichtman is professor of American history at American University.
Chapter 1. Logic of the Keys: How Presidential Elections Really Work
Chapter 2. Turning the Keys to the Presidency
Chapter 3. Civil War and Reconstruction
Chapter 4. The Gilded Age
Chapter 5. Rise and Fall of Progressivism
Chapter 6. Depression, War, and Cold War
Chapter 7. New Directions, War, and Scandal
Chapter 8. The Reagan Revolution
Chapter 9. A False Dawn for Democrats
Chapter 10. The Winds of Political Change: Forecast for 2008
Chapter 11. Lessons of the Keys: Toward a New Presidential Politics
Do me a favor. Don't read this book. Because if you do, it could put all of us pundits and political consultants out of business. Allan Lichtman has some nerve, revealing our trade secrets to the great unwashed public. Including the biggest secret of all, which is that the presidential vote is simple, rational, and highly predictable.
— William Schneider, Political Analyst, CNN
Allan Lichtman's Keys to the White House serves as an important reminder to all of us, professional political analysts and interested citizens and observers alike, that fundamentals matter. Presidential elections are not personality contests or astrological events. Rational forces drive presidential election outcomes and nobody does a better job of making that case than Lichtman does. If you want to have the best chance of figuring out which side will win in November 2008, there is no better book to read.
— Charlie Cook, Editor and Publisher, The Cook Political Report; Fellow, Institute of Politics, Spring 2013
Of the hundreds of books written about presidential elections, one of the best is Allan J. Lichtman's The Keys to the White House.
— Roll Call
Overall, the 2008 edition that applies the keys to the 2008 presidential election is a useful update that will interest readers broadly.
— Political Science Quarterly, October 1, 2009
For generations, politicians, pundits, and poll-takers have been seeking their version of the Holy Grail—a surefire, guaranteed way to predict presidential elections well ahead of time. It may have been found in this book.
— David Broder
Of the hundreds of books written about presidential elections, one of the best is Allan J. Lichtman's The Keys to the White House.
— Roll Call