Please Note: This program has a date update (originally October 19, 2020).
STREAMING PROGRAM INFORMATION
- This program is part of our Smithsonian Associates Streaming series.
- Platform: Zoom
- Online registration is required.
- If you register multiple individuals, you will be asked to supply individual names and email addresses so they can receive a Zoom link email. Please note that if there is a change in program schedule or a cancellation, we will notify you via email, and it will be your responsibility to notify other registrants in your group.
Delegate hunter, campaign manager, White House chief of staff, treasury secretary and secretary of state, James Addison Baker III played a leading role in some of the most critical junctures in modern American history. Washington’s indispensable man, for a quarter century every Republican president relied on him to manage their campaign, their White House, and their world. Baker brought them to power or helped them stay there, then steered them through the momentous events that followed.
He ran five presidential campaigns for three presidents and helped secure the Florida recount victory for a fourth. As White House chief of staff, he helped make Ronald Reagan a successful president. As treasury secretary, he rewrote the tax code from top to bottom in collaboration with leading Democrats. As secretary of state, he and his close friend George Bush managed the most tumultuous period in international politics since World War II, building the coalition that won the first Gulf War, helping to reunify Germany, and bringing the Cold War to a peaceful end. As a political consigliere in Florida, he helped put George W. Bush in the White House.
Drawing on their new book, The Man Who Ran Washington: The Life and Times of James A. Baker III, Peter Baker, New York Times chief White House correspondent, and New Yorker staff writer Susan Glasser offer a case study in the acquisition, exercise, and preservation of power as seen through the career of one of the most significant and influential leaders in modern American government never to serve as president of the United States. Bob Schieffer, former anchor of CBS Evening News and former host of Face the Nation, moderates.
Copies of The Man Who Ran Washington (Doubleday) are available for purchase.
Book Sale Information
Patron Information
- Once registered, patrons should receive an automatic email confirmation from CustomerService@SmithsonianAssociates.org.
- Separate Zoom link information will be emailed closer to the date of the program. If you do not receive your Zoom link information 24 hours prior to the start of the program, please email Customer Service for assistance.
- View Common FAQs about our Streaming Programs on Zoom.