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Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Nationalist Uprising Kindle Edition
From the reporter who was there at the very beginning comes the revealing inside story of the partnership between Steve Bannon and Donald Trump—the key to understanding the rise of the alt-right, the fall of Hillary Clinton, and the hidden forces that drove the greatest upset in American political history.
Based on dozens of interviews conducted over six years, Green spins the master narrative of the 2016 campaign from its origins in the far fringes of right-wing politics and reality television to its culmination inside Trump’s penthouse on election night.
The shocking elevation of Bannon to head Trump’s flagging presidential campaign on August 17, 2016, hit political Washington like a thunderclap and seemed to signal the meltdown of the Republican Party. Bannon was a bomb-throwing pugilist who’d never run a campaign and was despised by Democrats and Republicans alike.
Yet Bannon’s hard-edged ethno-nationalism and his elaborate, years-long plot to destroy Hillary Clinton paved the way for Trump’s unlikely victory. Trump became the avatar of a dark but powerful worldview that dominated the airwaves and spoke to voters whom others couldn’t see. Trump’s campaign was the final phase of a populist insurgency that had been building up in America for years, and Bannon, its inscrutable mastermind, believed it was the culmination of a hard-right global uprising that would change the world.
Any study of Trump’s rise to the presidency is unavoidably a study of Bannon. Devil’s Bargain is a tour-de-force telling of the remarkable confluence of circumstances that decided the election, many of them orchestrated by Bannon and his allies, who really did plot a vast, right-wing conspiracy to stop Clinton. To understand Trump's extraordinary rise and Clinton’s fall, you have to weave Trump’s story together with Bannon’s, or else it doesn't make sense.

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Editorial Reviews
Review
One of NPR’s Great Reads of 2017
“The first deeply insightful political narrative of the Trump era.” —David Leonhardt, The New York Times
“Indispensable.” —Jeffrey Toobin, The New Yorker
“Mr. Green is a talented reporter and a gifted storyteller. The anecdotes he records from the chaotic 2016 Trump campaign are both well chosen (they’re there for thematic reasons, not as gratuitous gossip) and brilliantly told.” —Wall Street Journal
“You won’t be able to put it down. I certainly couldn’t, surrendering a weekend I should have rightly spent with the kids. I spent it instead with a 63-year-old nationalist whom Time magazine all but called the shadow President of the United States . . . Addictive.” —Newsweek
“Deeply reported and compulsively readable . . . Green is consistently interesting on the subject of Trump. But the real value of Devil’s Bargain is the story it tells about Bannon, some of which has been previously reported (not least by Green himself) but never so well synthesized or explained as it is here.” —Bret Stephens, The New York Times
“Tremendous.” —GQ
“Vividly pulls back the curtain on the symbiotic relationship between two of America’s most polarizing figures. . . . Green is nothing but prescient.” —The Guardian
“Green saw Bannon as an important figure early on and began to track his career long before other journalists. As a result, Green had the material and access to produce a deeply researched and sharply observed account of a political figure and a movement that took most of the country by surprise . . . Readers will find no better guide to Bannon’s vision than this gripping and sometimes appalling account.” —Foreign Affairs
“One of the best, more thoroughly researched, and arguably most influential 2016 books to come out so far, Devil's Bargain is the product of years of interviews and tight reporting from journalist Joshua Green. He thrillingly tracks the influence of Steve Bannon and the alt-right on Trump's candidacy, persuasively arguing they were intrinsic to his rise and eventual victory. It's disturbing, fascinating stuff for anyone interested in this newly powerful fringe.” —Entertainment Weekly
“In this important and vivid book, the veteran journalist Joshua Green . . . examines the role of Bannon, the man who, on convincing evidence laid out here, was instrumental in securing the most improbable election victory in modern political history.” —The Times (London)
“Intelligent, insightful, and fast-moving.” —The Washington Times
“Delicious from page one.” —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“Fast-paced, crisp, and cogent, this is a first look into a dark corner of history whose ramifications are only beginning to be understood." —PopMatters
“Joshua Green is an incredible storyteller, and Bannon is an incredible subject.” —Paste Magazine
“Splendid.” —Esquire
“Fascinating . . . required reading for anyone interested in the future.” —Janet Maslin, The New York Times
“Absorbing . . . the first thing I’ve read in the last year and a half that manages to make some sense of the human catastrophic weather event that is Steve Bannon.”—The Millions
“Behind the scenes and ripped from the headlines, Green’s saga exuberantly traces Trump’s wild ride to the presidency.” —Kirkus
About the Author
“Deeply reported and compulsively readable…Green is consistently interesting on the subject of Trump. But the real value of Devil’s Bargain is the story it tells about Bannon, some of which has been previously reported (not least by Green himself) but never so well synthesized or explained as it is here.” —Bret Stephens, The New York Times
“Mr. Green is a talented reporter and a gifted storyteller. The anecdotes he records from the chaotic 2016 Trump campaign are both well chosen (they’re there for thematic reasons, not as gratuitous gossip) and brilliantly told.” —Wall Street Journal
"You won’t be able to put it down. I certainly couldn’t, surrendering a weekend I should have rightly spent with the kids. I spent it instead with a 63-year-old nationalist whom Time magazine all but called the shadow President of the United States . . . Addictive." —Newsweek
"Vividly pulls back the curtain on the symbiotic relationship between two of America’s most polarizing figures. . . . Green is nothing but prescient." —The Guardian
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Bannon didn’t have to guess at the culprit. He simply assumed it was Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s campaign manager, and how the hell would she know? Conway was a pollster by trade, but she tested messaging, not horse race, and the campaign had cut her off weeks earlier because Trump preferred to see her spinning on TV. If Bannon cared to—and right now, he did not—he could have watched Acosta’s full report and looked for the Tell. That’s what always gave her away. Because Conway was the only woman on Trump’s senior staff, reporters avoided using gender pronouns when quoting her anonymously, lest an errant “she” slip out and reveal their source. Instead, they employed the awkward but gender‑neutral “this adviser” or “this person,” and by the third or fourth reference what they were doing became pretty obvious. That was the Tell. Some of Trump’s advisers had long ago caught on and joked about it.
Sure enough, Acosta cited “a senior adviser from Donald Trump’s inner circle,” followed by a trifecta of “this adviser”s, with nary a “he” or a “she” to be heard. Even before he’d finished talking, CNN— Trump’s obsession and bête noire—had billboarded the “take a miracle” quote in a banner that stretched across the screen.
But Bannon had already moved on. He could never fathom why people like Conway worked so hard to win goodwill from reporters (most of whom, he thought, were idiots with no earthly idea what was really going on) or why they cared so much about appearances.
It took only a glance to see that Bannon himself cared not a whit for appearances—at least not his own. This was, in fact, one of his defining traits. He had spent most of his life donning the uniform of the various institutions to which he belonged: the cadet’s uniform at Benedictine High School, the all‑male Roman Catholic military school he and his brothers attended in Richmond, Virginia; the naval officer’s starched whites during his eight‑year stint aboard destroyers in the Pacific and the Persian Gulf; and the banker’s expensive suits, a uniform of their own, which he’d worn during his tenure at Goldman Sachs.
But once he made real money and cashed out, Bannon gleefully threw off the strictures of the working stiff and adopted a singular personal style: rumpled oxfords layered over multiple polo shirts, ratty cargo shorts, and flip‑flops—a sartorial middle finger to the whole wide world.
Even now, at sixty‑three, having left a right‑wing media empire a few months earlier to become Trump’s chief campaign strategist, Bannon made only the tiniest concession to the Trump world’s boardroom ethos by swapping the cargo shorts for cargo pants and tossing a blazer over his many layers of shirting. Although it was Election Night and television satellite trucks stretched for blocks around Trump Tower, Bannon hadn’t bothered with a shave or a haircut, and he had a half dozen pens clipped to his shirt placket, like some bizarre military epaulet. “Steve needs to be introduced to soap and water,” said Roger Stone, Trump’s longtime political adviser. He looked for all the world like someone preparing to spend the night on a park bench.
But Trump needed him. Practically alone among his advisers, Bannon had had an unshakable faith that the billionaire reality‑TV star could prevail—and a plan to get him there. “It’s gonna be ugly,” Bannon would tell anyone who would listen during the closing weeks of the campaign. “But there’s a path.”
***
In the days after the election, the world wondered: How could this happen? Many people still wonder. No shortage of scapegoats and malefactors were offered up by way of explanation: James Comey, the Russians, the media, “fake news,” sexism—the list went on and on. Yet none was entirely satisfying, or big enough to encompass the scale of the shock, or capable of unwinding the sense of dislocation so many people felt when they awoke to the realization that something so seemingly unlikely—so utterly extreme—as Trump’s election could happen in plain view of everyone, without anyone really seeing it coming. It was like the opening scene of a Hollywood thriller, the sudden jolt that makes you sit upright in your seat, and after which some remarkable, winding backstory is gradually revealed. But the revelation never arrived. Even now, there’s a sense that some vital piece of the puzzle is missing.
That piece is Steve Bannon.
From Machiavelli to Karl Rove, politics has a rich history of the genius figure whose plots and intrigues on behalf of a ruler make him the hidden hand behind the throne, the wily strategist secretly guiding the nation’s affairs. So familiar has this story become that it’s a trope of American political journalism: if you’re a presidential candidate without a brilliant strategist, the media will often take it upon themselves to anoint one you never knew you had. The strategists, aware of this narrative compulsion, openly jockey to win the position.
Although he’s been cast in the role, Bannon is no such figure— or in any event, he doesn’t fit the typical mold any more than Trump fit the mold of “typical presidential candidate.” What Bannon is instead is a brilliant ideologue from the outer fringe of American politics—and an opportunistic businessman—whose unlikely path happened to intersect with Trump’s at precisely the right moment in history.
For years, Bannon had been searching for a vessel for his populist‑nationalist ideas, trying out and eventually discarding Tea Party politicians such as Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann. At the same time, he was building an elaborate machine designed to destroy the great enemy whose march to the White House posed the biggest threat to those ideas and to everyone whose beliefs hewed to the right of center: Hillary Clinton. In 1998, when Clinton first posited a “vast right‑wing conspiracy” bent on ruining her and her husband, she was widely ridiculed. But she wasn’t wrong. By the time she launched her 2016 campaign, Bannon was sitting at the nexus of a far‑flung group of conspirators whose scope and reach Clinton and her campaign didn’t fathom until far too late.
At first, Bannon didn’t understand that he’d found the figure he’d been looking for. Trump wasn’t a serious candidate and would never deign to let some Rove figure govern his behavior—that much was clear from the outset. But Bannon soon discovered that Trump’s great personal force could knock down barriers that impeded other politicians. And Trump, for his part, seemed to recognize that Bannon alone could focus and channel his uncanny political intuition with striking success. Bannon didn’t make Trump president the way Rove did George W. Bush—but Trump wouldn’t be president if it weren’t for Bannon. Together, their power and reach gave them strength and influence far beyond what either could have achieved on his own.
Any study of Trump’s rise to the presidency is therefore unavoidably a study of Bannon, too. It’s a story Trump won’t like, because he isn’t always the central character. And because, contrary to his blustery assertions, his victory wasn’t a landslide, didn’t owe solely to the force of his personality or his business savvy, and happened only due to a remarkable confluence of circumstances. This confluence occurred in large part because Bannon had built a trap that snapped shut on Clinton, and the success of this, too, was an incredible long shot. In fact, the whole saga of Bannon is every bit as strange and unlikely as that of Trump. He’s like an organism that could have grown and blossomed only under a precise and exacting set of conditions—a black orchid.
This book is the backstory of how those conditions came to be—it’s the part of the movie you haven’t seen. To understand Trump’s extraordinary rise, you have to go all the way back and begin with Steve Bannon, or else it doesn’t make sense.
Product details
- ASIN : B0728KHFD5
- Publisher : Penguin Books; Reprint edition (July 18, 2017)
- Publication date : July 18, 2017
- Language : English
- File size : 1.5 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 302 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #639,995 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #214 in Campaigns & Elections
- #382 in 21st Century History of the U.S.
- #423 in Elections
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Joshua Green is author of the #1 New York Times bestseller, "Devil's Bargain: Steve Bannon, Donald Trump, and the Storming of the Presidency" (Penguin), a national correspondent for Bloomberg Businessweek, and a CNN political analyst. Previously, Green was an editor at the Atlantic and the Washington Monthly, and a political columnist for the Boston Globe. He's also written for the New Yorker, Esquire, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair and other publications. Green regularly appears on CNN's shows, HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher, and PBS’s Washington Week and Frontline.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book to be a must-read for those closely following the administration, with well-researched insights into Steve Bannon's background and the campaign's inner workings. The writing style is engaging and easy to read, while the reporting is praised for its believable balance. Customers describe the book as eye-opening and scary, with one customer noting how it masterfully puts everything into perspective.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book engaging and worth their time, particularly noting that the first half is very good and considering it essential reading for those closely following the administration.
"...Devil's Bargain is well-written and reads like a novel; however, it's also well-researched...." Read more
"...The book is good on the campaign, but it also explains Bannon's long-term objectives and his political ideas...." Read more
"A strong, well written story about the background, inspiration and behind the scene actions of Steve Bannon that contributed a lot to the..." Read more
"...Smart, scrappy, and decidedly blue collar, he scratched and clawed his way to wealth and power and did it his own way...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful, well-researched, and thought-provoking.
"...is well-written and reads like a novel; however, it's also well-researched...." Read more
"...Smart, scrappy, and decidedly blue collar, he scratched and clawed his way to wealth and power and did it his own way...." Read more
"Let me say, first, that this is a well-written book and contains a lot of information helpful to understanding the Trump-Bannon-Mercer nexus...." Read more
"...This media outlet was instrumental in bringing down Hillary. The author continues on describing how Bannon aided Trump...." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, finding it well written and easy to read, with one customer noting it was written while the events were still fresh in the minds of the sources.
"...Devil's Bargain is well-written and reads like a novel; however, it's also well-researched...." Read more
"...He has read a lot of history and can quote Plutarch. His political views often shock the political establishment...." Read more
"A strong, well written story about the background, inspiration and behind the scene actions of Steve Bannon that contributed a lot to the..." Read more
"Let me say, first, that this is a well-written book and contains a lot of information helpful to understanding the Trump-Bannon-Mercer nexus...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's insights into Steve Bannon's background and character, describing him as an extremely intelligent and fascinating figure, with one customer noting how it captures his eccentricities perfectly.
"...Green, a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek, this is an excellent exposé of how Bannon and others influenced Trump, his campaign, and the early..." Read more
"...The book is good on the campaign, but it also explains Bannon's long-term objectives and his political ideas...." Read more
"...Bannon had cycled through multiple marriages and was rich, brash, charismatic, volcanic, opinionated, and never ruffled by doubt...." Read more
"...the Storming of the Presidency", is a well written, non-partisan look at Donald Trump and his campaign and victory, with particular emphasis on..." Read more
Customers find the book illuminating, providing a deeper look at the subject matter and masterfully putting everything into perspective.
"...It gives a pretty good perspective even today, with Bannon's departure from the White House...." Read more
"...And he squeezed in “next to Ivanka Trump.” It’s quite the image, the corpulent, sweaty Christie pushing himself into the personal space of the..." Read more
"...this book and I found the exploration of his background to be quite illuminating...." Read more
"..."Devil's Bargain" is very good for a deeper look into Bannon's background and the experiences that likely make him tick...." Read more
Customers appreciate the narrative quality of the book, describing it as a spellbinding story that honestly portrays history and provides cogent near-term history.
"...The central character of the book is Bannon and it provides a brief biography. Bannon grew up in a working class, Irish-Catholic family in Virginia...." Read more
"...I can't say this book gave it to me but it does provide some good background on his life experience...." Read more
"...But then he ends the book with non-factual and bias conclusions as to what will happen in the future with Trump, even though it's still early, like..." Read more
"...Simply stated, Joshua Green has created a spellbinding story of how two humans from highly-dissimilar backgrounds merged each’s distinct subset of..." Read more
Customers find the book frightening and disturbing, with one noting it provides great insight into a very dangerous man.
"...Fascinating and disturbing to understand all that was going on behind the scenes." Read more
"...Sad and frightening at the same time." Read more
"The narrative looking back on the election is both revealing and frightening...." Read more
"...to start because the portrait it paints of the man is truly, truly frightening...." Read more
Customers praise the reporting quality of the book, describing it as balanced and excellent, with one customer highlighting its coverage of the wild campaign.
"...This book is an excellent piece of reporting and explains muc about the Trump/Bannon alliance...." Read more
"Quick and enjoyable read. Surprisingly balanced - the author def makes it a point to give Bannon and Trump credit where credit is due...." Read more
"...There is a reasonably level of believable balance to the tale Mr. Green weaves." Read more
"...I felt it was well-balanced and had no obvious agenda other than honestly portraying history." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2018I couldn't resist reading another book that explores how Trump succeeded in the 2016 election. This book focuses on Steve Bannon, his career before politics, and his personal philosophy about government and much else. Written by Joshua Green, a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek, this is an excellent exposé of how Bannon and others influenced Trump, his campaign, and the early days of the administration.
It's horrifying to think that such a large percentage of the U.S. population could be so easily manipulated by these creeps. But the toxic combination of white supremacists, racists, misogynists, and pseudo-Christians just ate up what was served by Trump, Bannon, and others. The thought that the 35-40 % of Americans who support Trump are holding the rest of us hostage to this craziness is just maddening. Republicans who are doing nothing to rein him in will not be looked kindly on by history. I'm looking forward to the day when the truth comes out and they are shown for the racist kleptocrats that they are.
Devil's Bargain is well-written and reads like a novel; however, it's also well-researched. Anyone who wants a fuller picture of how we got where we are should read this book.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 15, 2018Devil's Bargain is a fascinating book written by Bloomberg journalist Joshua Green. It details the short-lived partnership between Donald Trump and Steve Bannon. Green interviewed Bannon at length and he takes you inside the Trump campaign. Green argues that Bannon, who first met Trump in 2011, offered the future president two services without which Trump could never have won the 2016 election: “a fully formed, internally coherent worldview…about trade and foreign threats,” and an “infrastructure of conservative organizations” that had spent years attacking and hating Hillary Clinton.
Bannon has a habit of taking credit for everything that went right on the Trump campaign. Green makes a persuasive case: that Trump “seemed to recognize” that it was “Bannon alone” who could get Trump elected. The book argues that Trump's win is largely due to Bannon and Trump became a vessel for Bannon’s nationalist ideas. The book is gossipy and very readable and helps explain how Trump managed to get elected.
The book is good on the campaign, but it also explains Bannon's long-term objectives and his political ideas. The central character of the book is Bannon and it provides a brief biography. Bannon grew up in a working class, Irish-Catholic family in Virginia. He joined the Navy, got a master’s degree from Georgetown. He went to Harvard Business School and then to Goldman Sachs. He specialized in media and made deals between movie studios and TV companies and then became a film producer. Having acquired wealth, Bannon began focusing on politics. Before meeting Trump, Bannon had advised Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann.
Bannon became the chairman of Breitbart News. Bannon described his ideology to Mother Jones as "nationalist" and claimed that Breitbart News was the "platform for the alt-right". The alt-right has been demonized by the liberal intelligentsia. The New York Times described it “as a loosely organized group of mostly young men who believe in white supremacy; oppose immigration, feminism, and multiculturalism; and delight in harassing Jews, Muslims, and other vulnerable groups by spewing shocking insults on social media.” The alt-right is often described as neo-Nazi by the left because they view them as racists. Bannon is adamant that populism and fascism ‘are not even related’. On economic policy, he may be right. In the 1930s Hitler's regime was closer to the totalitarian rule of Stalin than it was to the laissez-faire capitalism of Herbert Hoover. Hitler rejected the market economy, embraced socialist policies and government intervention. Like the communists, he also believed in world domination.
Breitbart News helped Trump dispatch his Republican competitors. Bannon became Trump’s campaign manager in August 2016 at the behest of the Mercer family, which funds right-wing causes (including Breitbart). Bannon took a leave from Breitbart while working for Trump. The book claims that Bannon was the architect of Trump’s populist campaign message. Green believes that Trump was never really a nationalist, but instead, was an opportunist who wanted to get elected and Bannon's ideas seemed to be popular.
Bannon views himself as a political philosopher. He has read a lot of history and can quote Plutarch. His political views often shock the political establishment. He does not believe in virtue signaling or political correctness. He believes in a coming great-powers clash with an axis of the ancient Turkish, Persian and Chinese civilizations. According to Michael Wolff, Bannon told former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes that "China is where Nazi Germany was in 1929 to 1930.” Bannon believes “we’re at economic war with China” and only one will be a global hegemon in 25 or 30 years. He views China as an existential threat and argues that the US is losing the economic war. He has also predicted a military conflict in the South China Seas within 5-10 years.
Bannon is critical of Wall Street. He believes that by 2008 Wall Street firms had become "highly leveraged hedge funds" and they had "wrecked the economy." He believes in capitalism and does not believe that taxpayers should bail out Wall Street. Strangely, Bannon suggests that liberal/left wing ideas have corrupted Wall Street. He believes in protectionism and has criticized Wall Street for promoting free trade and helping to outsource American jobs.
According to Green, Bannon is worried about globalization. He believes that the rise of populist movements in the U.S., Europe, and Japan represents a return to tradition. Bannon believes you have to control: the border, the currency, the military, and national identity. People are finally coming to realize that, and politicians will have to follow.
Bannon believes the EU and Angela Merkel plan to abolish the nation-state and create a world without borders. German nationalism caused a lot of problems in the 20th century, so Merkel's fears are understandable. However, Bannon views the EU and Merkel as twin threats. Bannon fears the EU is trying to eliminate national culture through immigration. Bannon has often spoken favorably about European populist movements that want to preserve the nation-state and he has supported nationalist movements in Europe. Helping to get Trump elected has given him credibility with European populists. The left-wing London Guardian has described Bannon as an evil genius.
Bannon has a habit of biting the hand that feeds him. He often makes controversial statements that upset even his allies. Bannon seems to have fallen out of favor with Trump and the Mercers. The Wall Street Journal believes that Trump feels “betrayed” depicting Bannon as a self-promoter who inflated his importance in the president’s election victory. Rebekah Mercer has said that Bannon, “took Breitbart in the wrong direction.” However, Bannon has not gone away and he is turning his attention to Europe where populism is on the rise. He appears to be trying to cobble together an international front of far-right and neo-fascist political parties. Many of his ideas seem to resonate with ordinary people because their views are often ignored by the elites. The establishment in Europe is starting to view Bannon as a potential threat to stability. Some conservative commentators in London believe that Bannon is a racist who has crossed the line into fascism. We are waiting to see what Bannon does next.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2017A strong, well written story about the background, inspiration and behind the scene actions of Steve Bannon that contributed a lot to the presidential victory of Trump. I learned a lot of new details and was reminded of others. The book is just right. Not too slim on details while not being too tedious.
The book gives you a clear sense of the power of behind the scenes money and propaganda to influence who rules the USA and the world. You learn once more that very little of politics is a means towards betterment of lives of people. Rather it is a grand game to be won no matter what. Maybe we can be awakened by the book and work towards more noble and honest goals. An important point the book illustrates is how the recent economics of news delivery has promoted sensationalism and led to the demise of old school investigative reporting and analysis of facts that are truly relevant news. The author, Joshua Green, provides detailed accounts of how Steven Bannon and rich people financing his efforts have cleverly taken advantage of this change in information delivery to win big. It is unfortunate that their motives and winnings benefit them and almost nobody else. A lot like Trump wanting to win a health care victory even though he has no interest in what the actual details are. Win, win, win. Tell people whatever you think will get them excited. Promote anything into a big story using the power of the Internet.
The book does also indicate how stupid and ineffective the mainstream Democratic party was. I can admire Bannon's cleverness and hard work. What a story. What a waste of human cleverness and hard work. And that's the way it is in the year 2017.
A good related book to read is Dark Money by Jane Mayer. For a positive story read Al Franken, Giant of the Senate.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2017I was looking for a book that explains what I consider Steve Bannon's insane nihilist views. I can't say this book gave it to me but it does provide some good background on his life experience. Smart, scrappy, and decidedly blue collar, he scratched and clawed his way to wealth and power and did it his own way. The Navy, Goldman Sachs, his own businesses, Brietbart and finally the White House. He has really built a resume. Now he thinks he can make a better world by tearing the whole thing down? Or is he just a talented guy who can't get past the massive chip on his shoulder and is making us all endure his lifelong tantrum? I still don't have that answer but this book is worth reading if you are as perplexed by Bannon as I am. Can't say I learned much about Trump, don't care to waste many words on him and neither does Joshua Green. More chapters need to be written on this crazy piece of history.
Top reviews from other countries
- BlueGreenODReviewed in Australia on August 25, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply brilliant
Joshua Green has written an absolute political classic, a resource that will be relied upon for years to come for those trying to work out how Trump became President. In the meantime, Green's research and analysis is being employed by countless commentators as if it is their own work. What really stands out in this book is it simply a joy to read, it is genuinely one of those books you cannot put down
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Cliente AmazonReviewed in Spain on October 6, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars President Bannon
La obra te atrapa desde la primera página. Trump no sería presidente sin la ayuda de Steve Bannon. Muy recomendable.
- Peace & QuietReviewed in France on July 17, 2019
1.0 out of 5 stars Bof!!
Boring. Don't bother. They're not worth it and should be ashamed of themselves-
-
JKReviewed in Japan on August 14, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars トランプ大統領の大逆転を追う。
2016年最大のサプライズ、トランプ氏の大統領選での逆転勝利、それを導いた選挙参謀スティーブ・バノンの戦略は何だったのか?われわれ日本人には計り知れない首都ワシントンでの米政治の内幕、ロビーストの存在、トップ富裕層の選挙への関わり、共和党の強さと民主党の脆さ。これらが分かり易く記述され、大統領選挙の実体が暴かれていく。キンドル版は人名検索が容易なのでストーリーへしっかり付いてていける。
- GarethGrayReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 3, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Bannon is cool but he is on the wrong side
I can’t remember a book keeping me up all night reading before, but this one did. It felt to me like an urgent despatch from a dangerous and encroaching front line. In making notes on the Kindle I had to force myself to say something, anything other than “Holy Cow!”.
The star of the show is Bannon. Trump, I think, we get. Narcissist, egomaniac, etcetera – all the usual epithets. But Bannon? I found it thrilling in a disturbing sort of way that someone like him even exists in the opaque, mechanistic world of Anglo-American politics, and not only exists, but proved able to throw his foul clog into the machine and seize it up.
Nobody saw him coming. As Green notes, in 2015, “Trump was still considered a carnival sideshow, Breitbart News a site for trolls and crazies, and Bannon a fringe figure who wouldn’t possibly factor into something as large and important as a presidential race. These were all assumptions the Clinton brain trust would come to bitterly regret.” Me too.
Bannon was an inventive, committed, skilled propagandist with a vivid, compelling and urgent world historical narrative, and a plan. And a drive to see it through that bordered on the insane.
One of the eye-openers was that what drives him is not racism, exactly, but Traditionalism. He has sussed that a vast swath of Americans crave psychological comfort and validation, and his prescription for this ill is Traditionalism, an anti-liberal, medieval programme of deliberate de-civilisation. It seeks to harness the power of shared experience, myth, clan and national identity. It needs a mortal enemy, and it needs shrill, grating, persistent, schema-violating propaganda. Putin’s doing it, Erdogan’s doing it, Xi’s doing it, so why shouldn’t Trump, especially since Trump was so willing, and amenable? Trump was the mouthy mouthpiece; Bannon supplied the world view.
Bannon didn’t just make speeches, though. He proactively created his constituency (losers in the liberal economic order) with patience, intelligence and determination. He set up real, interlocking mechanisms to validate and give voice to these losers. Breitbart was one mechanism. The Government Accountability Institute (GAI) was another. Funded by weird plutocrats like the Mercers, the GAI’s Peter Schweizer holed Clinton below the waterline with his book, “Clinton Cash” (Harper, 2015), conceived and produced under Bannon’s guiding hand. Cambridge Analytica was another, and Bannon’s film company, Glittering Steel, was the fourth.
By the time anyone in the Clinton camp worked out what was going on, it was too late. All they had was the sick realisation that Bannon was smarter, more cunning, more talented, more connected, and – crucially – more ready to use tactics they would never even dream of using.
Like Satan in Paradise Lost, Bannon is cool but he is still on the wrong side. As Green catalogues, one of the thinkers he absorbed to derive his world view is Baron Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola (1898-1974), better known as Julius Evola, one of the saltier adherents of the Traditionalist school, and darling of Mussolini and the Nazis. Bannon’s ends are dark, and so are his means – mob-anger, deceit, ruthlessness.
Devil’s Bargain is a wake-up call. The thing about us liberals is that we don’t even recognise ourselves as “liberals” in the pejorative sense of Bannon and Breitbart. But we are. We are elitist, cosmopolitan beneficiaries of the global economic order. We have faith in “progress”, in the free market’s benign invisible hand, and in the promise of technology to keep us rich and happy and to save the planet. The problem is we may be wrong, and we are vastly outnumbered. And, thanks to Bannon, we lost control of the debate. To take it back, we may need to study Bannon’s methods.
P.s: A really interesting companion to Devil’s Bargain is Pankaj Mishra’s Age of Anger, which, disorientingly, might leave you less liberal and more sympathetic to Traditionalism.