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Picking Presidents: How to Make the Most Consequential Decision World
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Picking Presidents: How to Make the Most Consequential Decision World in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.99

Barnes and Noble
Picking Presidents: How to Make the Most Consequential Decision World in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $19.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Audiobook
"If you only read one book to understand how Democrats will, and should, pick a new nominee—and the stakes of the general election—read
Picking Presidents
, which explains how to judge if a Presidential candidate is worthy of sitting in the Oval Office."—Thomas L. Friedman,
New York Times
columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author
Celebrated leadership expert and political scientist Gautam Mukunda provides a comprehensive, objective, and non-partisan method for answering the most important question in the world: is someone up to the job of president of the United States?
In
Picking Presidents,
Gautam Mukunda sets his sights on presidential candidates, proposing an objective and tested method to assess whether they will succeed or fail if they win the White House. Combining political science, psychology, organizational behavior, and economics,
will enable every American to cast an informed vote.
In his 2012 book
Indispensable
, which all but predicted the Trump presidency, Mukunda explained how both the very best and very worst leaders are "unfiltered"—outsiders who take power without the understanding or support of traditional elites.
provides deep analysis of filtered and unfiltered presidents alike, from failed haberdasher and skillful president Harry Truman, to the exceptionally well-qualified—and ultimately reviled—James Buchanan; from Andrew Johnson, who set civil rights back by a century, to Theodore Roosevelt, who evaded party opposition to transform American society.
lays out a clear framework that anyone can use to judge a candidate and answer the all-important question: are they up to the job?
Picking Presidents
, which explains how to judge if a Presidential candidate is worthy of sitting in the Oval Office."—Thomas L. Friedman,
New York Times
columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author
Celebrated leadership expert and political scientist Gautam Mukunda provides a comprehensive, objective, and non-partisan method for answering the most important question in the world: is someone up to the job of president of the United States?
In
Picking Presidents,
Gautam Mukunda sets his sights on presidential candidates, proposing an objective and tested method to assess whether they will succeed or fail if they win the White House. Combining political science, psychology, organizational behavior, and economics,
will enable every American to cast an informed vote.
In his 2012 book
Indispensable
, which all but predicted the Trump presidency, Mukunda explained how both the very best and very worst leaders are "unfiltered"—outsiders who take power without the understanding or support of traditional elites.
provides deep analysis of filtered and unfiltered presidents alike, from failed haberdasher and skillful president Harry Truman, to the exceptionally well-qualified—and ultimately reviled—James Buchanan; from Andrew Johnson, who set civil rights back by a century, to Theodore Roosevelt, who evaded party opposition to transform American society.
lays out a clear framework that anyone can use to judge a candidate and answer the all-important question: are they up to the job?
"If you only read one book to understand how Democrats will, and should, pick a new nominee—and the stakes of the general election—read
Picking Presidents
, which explains how to judge if a Presidential candidate is worthy of sitting in the Oval Office."—Thomas L. Friedman,
New York Times
columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author
Celebrated leadership expert and political scientist Gautam Mukunda provides a comprehensive, objective, and non-partisan method for answering the most important question in the world: is someone up to the job of president of the United States?
In
Picking Presidents,
Gautam Mukunda sets his sights on presidential candidates, proposing an objective and tested method to assess whether they will succeed or fail if they win the White House. Combining political science, psychology, organizational behavior, and economics,
will enable every American to cast an informed vote.
In his 2012 book
Indispensable
, which all but predicted the Trump presidency, Mukunda explained how both the very best and very worst leaders are "unfiltered"—outsiders who take power without the understanding or support of traditional elites.
provides deep analysis of filtered and unfiltered presidents alike, from failed haberdasher and skillful president Harry Truman, to the exceptionally well-qualified—and ultimately reviled—James Buchanan; from Andrew Johnson, who set civil rights back by a century, to Theodore Roosevelt, who evaded party opposition to transform American society.
lays out a clear framework that anyone can use to judge a candidate and answer the all-important question: are they up to the job?
Picking Presidents
, which explains how to judge if a Presidential candidate is worthy of sitting in the Oval Office."—Thomas L. Friedman,
New York Times
columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author
Celebrated leadership expert and political scientist Gautam Mukunda provides a comprehensive, objective, and non-partisan method for answering the most important question in the world: is someone up to the job of president of the United States?
In
Picking Presidents,
Gautam Mukunda sets his sights on presidential candidates, proposing an objective and tested method to assess whether they will succeed or fail if they win the White House. Combining political science, psychology, organizational behavior, and economics,
will enable every American to cast an informed vote.
In his 2012 book
Indispensable
, which all but predicted the Trump presidency, Mukunda explained how both the very best and very worst leaders are "unfiltered"—outsiders who take power without the understanding or support of traditional elites.
provides deep analysis of filtered and unfiltered presidents alike, from failed haberdasher and skillful president Harry Truman, to the exceptionally well-qualified—and ultimately reviled—James Buchanan; from Andrew Johnson, who set civil rights back by a century, to Theodore Roosevelt, who evaded party opposition to transform American society.
lays out a clear framework that anyone can use to judge a candidate and answer the all-important question: are they up to the job?

















