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The little known but captivating story of electricity is at the heart of the New Deal. John A. Riggs is the perfect person to tell the tale. The battles between America's most politically astute president and a powerful industry created the hybrid, public-private electricity system that we know today. The compromises necessary to ensure equity and the public interest while unleashing the energy of private markets can inform the discussion of current issues such as telecommunications, infrastructure, and tax policy.
Walter Isaacson, author of The Innovators, Leonardo da Vinci, and Steve Jobs
Electricity was the internet of its dayand bringing it to the countryside affected more Americans than any other New Deal program. It was also the source of a bitter struggle between public and private power, full of 'high tension'the double entendre title of John A. Riggs's lucid and compelling tale. This is a fresh angle of vision on one of the most important and under-appreciated stories of the first half of the 20th century.
Jonathan Alter, author of The Defining Moment: FDR's Hundred Days and the Triumph of Hope
"[A]n exhaustive look at President Franklin Roosevelt's multipronged war against the private utility sector....Riggs dives deep into the legislative, judicial, and public opinion battles over Roosevelt's energy initiatives, including the Tennessee Valley Authority, and argues that the hybrid public-private system that emerged in America was critical to the nation's 'economic global supremacy' during and after WWII....[T]his authoritative account is a valuable resource for students of America's energy policy."
Publishers Weekly
"High Tension: Franklin Roosevelt's Battle to Power America is an innovative history of the chaos and conniving that created America's transformative electricity system (judged by The Atlantic to be the greatest invention since the printing press). Jack Riggs has given us a compelling read. Thoroughly researched and gracefully written, it crisply covers the historical panorama of the New Deal's hard-won achievements of breaking up the giant utility holding companies and bringing light and power to the vast darkened regions of our nation. A must for historians, it is also a gripping read for all.
Martin J. Sherwin, Pulitzer Prize-winning co-author of American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer, and author of A World Destroyed: Hiroshima and Its Legacies
High Tension vividly tells of FDR's struggle to control giant utility holding companies, build government dams, and electrify rural America. He took on powerful interests and reshaped the electricity system as a novel public-private enterprisea legacy that continues to this day. John A. Riggs tells an important story with relevance today, from reinventing electricity regulation to accommodate new clean energy technology to offering lessons for universal broadband access.
Ernest J. Moniz, U.S. Secretary of Energy, 20132017, CEO Energy Futures Initiative
Narrative history at its best. Riggs brings FDR to life as he gathers a team of brilliant and eccentric New Dealers to battle for public power, rural electrification, and the abolition of holding companies. The industry fights back with a coalition of stock manipulators and free enterprise proponents led by a remarkable advocate named Wendell Willkie.
Bruce Babbitt, U.S. Secretary of the Interior, 1992-2000
The story of electrification is the story we must return to, over and over again, to understand what it really means to build a public utility. Our age, like every age, has its essential services, and as John A. Riggs demonstrates, getting it right does not happen by accident, nor without a fight, but demands great political courage.
Tim Wu, Professor, Columbia Law School; New York Times contributing opinion writer; and author of The Curse of Bigness: Antitrust in the New Gilded Age
Electric utilities are fascinating combinations of economics, technology, and politics. Somehow all three have to be kept in harness for utility companies to succeed. Mr. Riggs explores the interplay of these factors in one of the most complex periods in the history of the industry. Good reading for anyone who likes the lights to come on and the computer to work.
John Rowe, former CEO of Commonwealth Edison and Exelon
A valuable resource dealing with a largelyand undeservedlyignored slice of FDR's New Deal agenda, but also of American history and, indeed, of all human progress.
David Pietrusza, author of 1948: Harry Truman's Improbable Victory and the Year That Transformed America
John A. Riggs gives us a fresh look at the people and politics that brought electricity to virtually all Americans, shaped today's economy, and powered the Arsenal of Democracy that led to victory in World War II. High Tension is a strong reminder of Edmund Burke's 18th Century admonition that 'politics ought to be adjusted, not to human reasoning, but to human nature, of which the reason is a part.' It is a joy to read and of enduring value.
Charles B. Curtis, Chairman, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission 19771981
The United States electric system not only underpins our economy, but also our way of life. Yet most Americans know nothing about its history. This story of a critical era in the development of the US power sector is a riveting tale of inventors, entrepreneurs, politics, legal battles, and shenanigans. The reader will come away with a new appreciation for what we take for granted.
Elizabeth Moler, Federal Energy Regulatory Commissioner, 19881997, Chair, 19931997; and Deputy US Energy Secretary 19971998, Acting Secretary, 1998
"In an engaging narrative, High Tension captures a transformative time in American history with titanic characters, exploring some of the most compelling battles of the early 20th Century with scintillating detail. It's also a book with powerful relevance today, reminding us that the conflict between corporate concentration of power and public interests is ongoing, unresolved, and demands our attention if we hope to achieve social progress in this century.
John F. Wasik, author of The Merchant of Power: Thomas Edison, Samuel Insull and the Creation of the Modern Metropolis
"The book features winning vignettes. . . . The meat of the saga, however, is the decades-long struggle to end the financial legerdemain that infested the electricity business, which constructed pyramid schemes with up to 10 levels of holding companies owning holding companies, all designed to divert profits to top financiers while placing the least amount of capital at risk. . . . Presenting a story that mingles business and politics at the highest level, High Tension has a complex tale to tell, one that requires the reader's attention."
Washington Independent Review of Books
Préface
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Auteur
John A. (Jack) Riggs studied history at Swarthmore College but took a lengthy detour into public policy before writing High Tension. Now a Senior Fellow at the Aspen Institute, he was at the center of energy policymaking in Washington, DC, for more than thirty years. He taught a graduate seminar in energy policy for five years at the University of Pennsylvania, moderated energy forums at the Aspen Institute, and testified more than a dozen times before Congressional energy committees.
He received a master s degree in public policy at Princeton s Woodrow Wilson School and served five year…