1 Acknowledgments 2 Foreword 3 Prologue: The Consumer Decade 4 1. Troubled Roots: A Little Town in the Valley 5 2. Dangerous Ground: The California Assembly 6 3. I Went to Bed a Loser: The Road to Congress 7 4. The People's Right to Know: A Distant Shore 8 5. The Freedom of Information Act: The Perilous Journey 9 6. The Product Safety Act: Consumer as Guinea Pig 10 7. Reviving the Federal Trade Commission: The Magnuson-Moss Act 11 8. Investor Protection: Breaking Wall Street's Monopoly 12 9. Cars, Chemicals, and Arab Oil: Changing Times 13 10. Consumer Protection in Retreat: Two Crushing Defeats 14 11. Freedom of Information Today: The Torture Memos 15 Epilogue: The Legacy
Michael R. Lemov served as chief counsel to John Moss for eight years and as general counsel of the National Commission on Product Safety.
During his tenure as a larger-than-life member of Congress, John
Moss was a major force in the development of our competitive
capital markets and enhancing the oversight powers of the
Securities and Exchange Commission. Michael Lemov has done an
outstanding job of capturing Moss's intellect, charisma and
contributions, in this important history of that era and Moss's
illustrious career.
*Harvey Pitt, former chairman, Securities and Exchange
Commission*
It requires tenacity to pry important, sometimes damaging public
information out of the government. No one was more tenacious than
Congressman John Moss, who spent 12 years fighting to enact the
Freedom of information Act. We should be grateful for his vision
and leadership. His life and the story of that battle to enact a
basic American freedom, is well told in Michael Lemov's wonderful
biography.
*Lucy Dalglish, Executive Director, Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press*
An insightful history of a time when Congress actually responded to
the American people and crucial laws to protect the consumer and
guarantee freedom of information to the public were enacted. A
story of the battles of one determined man and a real-life lesson
you are not likely to read in a text book.
*Peter Harkness, Founding Publisher, Governing Magazine, and former
Editor, Congressional Quarterly*
A new book People's Warrior: John Moss and the Fight for Freedom of
Information and Consumer Rights has just been published. Lovingly
prepared by his former chief counsel, Michael Lemov, this work
tells the amazing story of one man's determination to make
government information accessible to the public. He has an amazing
record of public service, from his work on the Consumer Product
Safety Act to the Securities Investor Protection Act and so much
more. It's almost unthinkable now, but before John Moss, average
citizens and the media did not have the right to see government
information. People's Warrior shines a light on an amazing life of
public service.
*Al Gore's Blog, Algore.Com*
...it's a day to remember underappreciated Americans who have made
a big difference. I've just finished reading a book about one of
them: the late John Moss, who from the early 1950s through the late
1970s was a Congressman from California's Central Valley. It is
mainly because of Moss that we now have a Freedom of Information
Act, a Consumer Product Safety Commission, various financial-reform
bodies, and a host of other protections that would not have a
prayer of getting through the Congress if they were introduced now.
Moss’s longtime aide and associate, Michael Lemov, has written a
new biography of him, People’s Warrior, that is startling mainly in
recalling an era in which politicians actually thought (gasp!) that
they could agree on significant reforms and get them passed in
relatively short order. It's only a generation ago, though it seems
as distant as the time of Upton Sinclair and Lincoln Steffens, and
Lemov's book conveys what it was like. The book is worth reading
and reflecting upon.
*The Atlantic*
People’s Warrior is the best account to date of Representative
Moss’s legislative battles to win the public’s right to obtain
government information, consumer protections, federal safety
standards for motor vehicles, and protections for securities in
brokerage accounts. For FOIA advocates, Lemov’s treatment of Moss’s
decades-long fight to pass the Freedom of Information Act –which
was signed into law on July 4th, 1966– is especially riveting.
*National Security Archive*
Mike Lemov, has done justice with this inspiring and instructive
account of one of the giants in our institution’s history.
*Congressional Record*
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