Topic

Robert D. Novak

32 articles 1995–2008

The Origins of McCarthyism

Robert Novak · June 30, 2003

DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN, during his long and illustrious public career, did not flinch from controversy. I doubt, therefore, that he would object to my having inserted him posthumously into an intriguing debate over recent history: Who was responsible a half-century ago for opening the door to…

Who Is Robert Bartley?

Robert Novak · January 13, 2003

Editor's Note: Robert L. Bartley, the distinguished former editor of the Wall Street Journal, died today at 66. Here are two articles about him published previously in The Weekly Standard.

Man of War

Robert Novak · December 2, 2002

General Patton A Soldier's Life by Stanley P. Hirshson HarperCollins, 826 pp., $34.95 IS THERE ANY JUSTIFICATION for yet another biography of the much-chronicled General George S. Patton Jr., particularly after the superb "Patton: A Genius for War" by Carlo D'Este (1995)? Certainly not the one…

Mastering the Senate

Robert Novak · April 29, 2002

Master of the Senate The Years of Lyndon Johnson by Robert A. Caro Knopf, 1,167 pp., $35 IT HAS BEEN twelve years since publication of "Means of Ascent," the second volume of Robert Caro's "The Years of Lyndon Johnson," but the long-anticipated third volume, "Master of the Senate," is worth the…

The Life and Times of Cap the Knife

Robert Novak · December 17, 2001

In the Arena A Memoir of the 20th Century by Caspar W. Weinberger, with Gretchen Roberts Regnery, 412 pp., $34.95 WHEN I OPENED Caspar Weinberger's memoir, an irresistible impulse propelled me to the chapter describing his outrageous persecution in 1992 by Lawrence Walsh, the out-of-control…

Stalin's Agents

Robert Novak · December 25, 2000

The president's most trusted adviser is a Soviet agent. The nation's leading nuclear scientist is turning secrets over to the Kremlin. The entire federal government is honeycombed with Communists. American intelligence agencies are infested with Russian spies. Soviet agents are working in the…

The GOP and Campaign Finance

Robert Novak · January 17, 2000

Campaign finance reform is one of the issues that the Democrats will seek to capitalize on in 2000, targeting Republicans for resisting any change. It's very much like the tax issue. If the Republicans don't have an alternative to present, they play into the Democrats' hands.

Ronald Reagan and his Imaginary Friend

Robert Novak · October 11, 1999

Somewhere in this collage of fancy, notes, and errant musings might be found a legitimate biography of the fortieth president of the United States. Certainly, Edmund Morris did not spend the last fourteen years idly waiting for the muse to seize him. Quite apart from his unprecedented access to…

MCCARTHY AND HIS NOVELIST

Robert Novak · July 5, 1999

Only a wordsmith of William F. Buckley's caliber could try, and largely succeed, in depicting Joe McCarthy as an engaging, sympathetic, and ultimately tragic figure. Buckley's McCarthy is a rogue -- but not a loathsome enemy of freedom so detestable that the very word "McCarthyism" is a name…

DULLES -- ALLEN DULLES

Robert Novak · June 14, 1999

The CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, was recently named in honor of George Bush, who served there only one year as its director and whose connection with the spy business was tangential at best. The honor should have gone to Allen Dulles, called, by his British counterpart Sir Kenneth W. D.…

WHEN I WAS A POINTYHEAD

Robert Novak · September 28, 1998

I HAD ARRIVED LATE FOR A RALLY in the south Alabama town of Robertsdale on the first day of George Corley Wallace's 1970 campaign for governor. Late on that early-spring evening, some 5,000 Alabamans -- all white, predominantly male, and many wearing bib overalls -- turned out for fried fish and…

I. F. STONE

Robert Novak · June 22, 1998

THIS IS THE NINTH ANNIVERSARY of I. F. Stone's death. When he died of a heart attack in a Boston hospital on June 18, 1989, he rated a top-of-the-page New York Times obituary that called him "a pugnacious advocate of civil liberties, peace and truth" and asserted that his "integrity" was…

BARRY AND ME

Robert Novak · June 15, 1998

I first met Barry Goldwater in 1957, when I was a 26-year-old reporter for the Associated Press helping cover the Senate Rackets Committee's investigation of organized labor. I liked him immensely. He was a reporter's dream: friendly, funny, and oh so helpful, telling just about everything he knew,…

ALL THE WAY WITH LBJ

Robert Novak · December 1, 1997

The insights into the workings of the White House that readers will find in this enthralling collection -- a transcript, with commentary, of covertly recorded conversations with Lyndon B. Johnson during his first nine months as president -- are typified by the disclosure of LBJ's intervention in a…

Sports Trumps Politics

Robert Novak · January 27, 1997

As a 15-year-old in 1946, I attended the final home game of my fellow townsman from Joliet, Ill., DePaul University basketball great George Mikan. When Joliet mayor Art Janke was introduced before the game to present an award to Mikan, the more than 20,000 fans gathered at the old Chicago Stadium…

HALF NELSON

Robert Novak · December 9, 1996

Twenty years after he last held public office and seventeen years after his death, the name of Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller is mentioned in Republican circles mainly as a pejorative.

TESTING-TIME FOR TERM LIMITS

Robert Novak · November 4, 1996

WHILE ENUMERATING THE SINS of his opponent in his rambling closing statement at the second presidential debate, Bob Dole blurted out this indictment: "President Clinton opposes term limits." Perhaps supporters of limiting congressional terms should have been grateful for those five little words, in…

72 WINS? BIG DEAL.

Robert Novak · June 3, 1996

On Sunday afternoon, April 21, I watched the Chicago Bulls mop up the meaningless season finale against the Washington Bullets, collecting their 72nd victory in the process. No team in the National Basketball Association had won as many as 70 games before -- thus suggesting to many that the 1996…

72 WINS? BIG DEAL.

Robert Novak · June 3, 1996

On Sunday afternoon, April 21, I watched the Chicago Bulls mop up the meaningless season finale against the Washington Bullets, collecting their 72nd victory in the process. No team in the National Basketball Association had won as many as 70 games before -- thus suggesting to many that the 1996…

THE BOOK ON WHITEWATER

Robert Novak · April 8, 1996

James Stewart, the celebrated investigative reporter, has performed a remarkable job of reconstructing the Whitewater affair in Blood Sport (Simon & Schuster, 479 pages, $ 25). But perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the book has been the reaction to it.

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN REPORTERS MAKE WAR

Robert Novak · January 15, 1996

An early defining moment of the American experience in Vietnam came on January 11, 1963, when Adm. Harry Felt, commander of U.S. forces in the Pacific, was conducting an airport press conference following a visit to Saigon. As the American correspondents in general and Malcolm Browne of the…

THE POLITICAL CASE AGAINST COLIN POWELL

Robert Novak · November 6, 1995

It was a bad night for Colin Powell last week at Washington s Omni Shoreham Hotel, where the American Conservative Union held its annual dinner. The General himself was nowhere to be seen. His transoceanic book tour completed, Powell was in seclusion deciding whether to seek the presidential…