Betrayal and Treason is a sweeping, unapologetic political history of the Democrat Party, tracing what Richard L. Kennedy argues is a 200-year pattern of constitutional betrayal, crisis exploitation, and centralized control.
Beginning with Andrew Jackson, Indian Removal, and the expansion of slavery, Kennedy follows the party's institutional path through secession, the Civil War, Reconstruction resistance, Jim Crow, Woodrow Wilson's administrative state, Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, the Dust Bowl narrative, modern climate politics, and immigration policy. At the center of the book is what Kennedy calls the Betrayal Template: a recurring process in which natural or social crises are re-framed as moral emergencies, dissent is condemned, government power expands, and temporary measures become permanent control.
This is not a neutral survey of American politics. It is a prosecutorial brief. Kennedy challenges the accepted story of progressive reform and argues that the same political instinct that defended slavery, resisted civil rights, and expanded federal power continues to operate under new language and new emergencies.
For readers interested in constitutional history, conservative political analysis, American party history, and critiques of centralized government, Betrayal and Treason offers a forceful, provocative argument: America's founding inheritance was purchased in blood, and every generation must decide whether to preserve it, reclaim it, or surrender it.