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Capable of Honor is a novel written by Allen Drury. Released in 1966, it is the third book in Drury's Advise and Consent series and tells of a presidential election being manipulated by the media.

Characters[]

  • Robert Durham Munson
  • Orrin Knox
  • Stanley Danta
  • Robert A. Leffingwell
  • Harley Hudson
  • Thomas August
  • Lafe Smith
  • Fred Van Ackerman

Publisher's summary[]

The author poses one of the most fundamental questions facing America today: how justifiably - or irresponsibly - do American press, television and radio attempt to interfere with, and control, the political process and the foreign policy of the nation?

Full summary[]

In the novel, Harley Hudson, the affable but inept vice president from Advise and Consent, is now president and seeking a term of his own against a backdrop of Soviet-instigated war, as the Soviet Union backs rebel governments in Panama and in the fictitious African republic of Gorotoland. Hudson responds with U.S. troops in both countries, and the conflicts soon bog down.

The election season soon turns on these foreign policy questions, with the media and others seeking a peace candidate — and finding it in the popular but weak-willed Governor Ted Jason of California. Having announced his candidacy late, Hudson announces an open contest for the vice presidential nomination, in which Secretary of State Orrin Knox, who supports Hudson's policies, opposes Jason. The media, who had supported Jason heavily when it looked like it would be a Knox-Jason race for the presidential nomination, continues its effort for a Jason victory by any means they can.

At the convention in San Francisco, extreme elements of the Left and Right combine to support Jason, and there are several violent incidents, including one in which Knox's daughter-in-law is brutally attacked. When it becomes clear that the convention is split down the middle in fights over the platform, Jason challenges Hudson for the Majority Party's nomination (the novels never use the proper names "Republican" or "Democrat" but the descriptions of Majority Party corresponds strongly to the Democrats of the 1960s). The media, meantime, spins merrily away, filtering what the country is allowed to see and hear from San Francisco. Ceil Jason, the Governor's wife, leaves him when her husband's lack of principle and willingness to tolerate the violence sinks in to her.

Hudson wins narrowly, and Jason expects the vice presidential nomination since he commands the support of almost half the convention. Hudson seems amenable, and places Jason on the dais as he makes his acceptance speech. Hudson humiliates Jason by making it clear that he considers Jason a panderer, and states he will accept Knox, and only Knox, as his running mate. The convention duly nominates Knox, but almost half its delegates walk out, to the pleasure of the media commentators, who predict a third-party convention from among the disaffected delegates.

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