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2024 by Josh Dawsey

2024

How Trump Retook the White House and the Democrats Lost America

by Josh Dawsey , Tyler Pager & Isaac Arnsdorf

Pub Date: July 8th, 2025
ISBN: 9780593832530
Publisher: Penguin Press

Three experienced D.C. reporters chronicle last year’s campaign.

This isn’t the first behind-the-scenes look at the recent presidential race, but it’s among the sturdiest, a well-sourced, process-oriented account that shows how inertia and missed opportunities deflated the Democrats. Drawing on hundreds of interviews with operatives from both parties and “alumni” from former President Barack Obama’s team, Dawsey, Pager, and Arnsdorf, who cover politics for the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, respectively, write that Democrats made crucial decisions “by default.” In a chapter titled “Sleepwalking,” they write, “Joe Biden decided to run for reelection by not deciding. He told aides: I’m running until I tell you I’m not. And he never told them he wasn’t.” Staffers didn’t want to look disloyal by suggesting he reconsider, “so no one ever said anything.” Later, one-time Obama staffers, worried about Biden’s chances, “looked for a diplomatic way to offer free assistance” on “specific projects.” Biden’s team promised to be in touch, but the collaboration never happened. After Biden’s disastrous debate performance, Ron Klain, his former chief of staff, vented about Biden’s apparent lack of urgency: “I have no fucking clue why he’s going to Camp David this weekend” instead of “working the phones” to reassure nervous Democrats. The reporters’ sources close to Vice President Kamala Harris, who became the nominee after Biden left the race, describe similar frustrations with her campaign’s sluggish decision-making and failure to challenge allegations made by Donald Trump. The authors find little new to write about Trump, retelling how criminal indictments and assassination attempts worked to his advantage and describing his staunchest supporters’ belief that God is looking out for him. But this is an excusable shortcoming in a substantive effort that’s ideal for readers reluctant to read multiple books on the subject.

With deep reporting and strong analysis, this might emerge as the definitive title on a hugely consequential election.