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Right Honourable Men:

The Descent of Canadian Politics from MacDonald to Chrétien
Front Cover
2 Reviews
HarperCollins Canada, Mar 13, 2012 - History - 360 pages

Updated with an insightful and controversial assessment of Jean Chrétien

Since first published in 1994, Right Honourable Men has remained the definitive source for Canadians wanting to know more about the quality of our leaders and the personalities behind the policies. Now, in this timely new edition, Bliss evaluates Jean Chrétien's record and asserts that he was actually a conservative prime minister -- as conservative as Mulroney himself. And Chrétien's legacy? A decade of squandered opportunities, national decline, and dashed hopes of real reform.

From the visionary Macdonald, the reckless Laurier, and the misunderstood King, to the flamboyant Trudeau, the vainglorious Mulroney and the wily Chrétien, Right Honourable Men defines the essence of political leadership in Canada, sets the standard for rating prime ministers, and provides a fascinating roadmap for our past -- and our future.

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Review: Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian Politics from MacDonald to Mulroney

User Review  - Chris - Goodreads

Michael Bliss provides brief-but-bounteous biographies of every Canadian Prime Minister from Sir John to Lyin' Brian, penned from a conservative point-of-view towards this predominantly liberal ... Read full review

Review: Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian Politics from MacDonald to Mulroney

User Review  - Gary Maunder - Goodreads

Interesting and readable. One of Canada's eminent historians evaluates and ranks Canada's Prime Ministers and finds most of them wanting. An intelligent discussion of what the role of a prime minister might be and is. Read full review

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About the author (2012)

Michael Bliss is University Professor of History at the University of Toronto and one of Canada's most distinguished historians. His eleven books include Plague: How Smallpox Devastated Montreal, which was shortlisted for a Governor General's Award, and William Osler: A Life in Medicine. He has won numerous Canadian and international awards, is a Member of the Order of Canada, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and has received Honorary Doctor of Letters degrees from McGill and McMaster universities.

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