"Berry marshals copious evidence that over the past four decades, liberal citizen groups have outperformed conservative groups and business lobbies in almost every regard —commanding more positive media attention, winning more legislative victories, and indeed lasting longer as organizations." — The American Prospect|"In 'The New Liberalism' (Brookings Institution Press), Jeffrey Berry, a professor at Tufts University, has tracked the influence of consumer advocacy and environmental groups since the 1960s. He concludes that they have been more effective than corporate lobbyists in getting their case across. Between 1963 and 1991, he says, groups such as Mr Nader's own Public Citizen were better at persuading Congress to discuss issues they cared about, better at catching journalists' attention, and so more efficient in shaping laws." — The Economist, 2/28/2004|"To Berry's scholarly inquiry, the quality of life, post-materialist agendas of liberal consumer, environmental, civil rights, and civil liberties groups have become institutionalized and are still giving fits to corporate power. The author's arguments should lift both the insights and morale of liberal citizen groups and provide some humility to business and conservative lobbyists who, somehow, believe that our national capital has been theirs since Reagan took office.... A dramatically counter-intuitive book that should give media-manufactured perceptions some introspective pause. —" —Ralph Nader, 2000 Presidential Candidate for the Green Party and Consumer Acitivist|"The book provides many examples of citizen group issues that Congress enacted into law. Examples include successful outcomes achieved by citizen groups when they were in direct conflict with business interests and when they were advocating on behalf of traditionally marginalized constituencies. " —Judith R. Saidel, University at Albany, SUNY