
In urging Congress to enter WWI, Wilson talked about the need to make the world "safe for democracy." In so doing, he perhaps inadvertently laid the predicate for the next century of US foreign policy and an idealism that often went beyond America's direct national interests.
He would come to define the modern activist Presidency, and would lay the groundwork for a broader role for the federal government.
He did it all coming to office with a minimum of political experience, accusations of elitism, racism and a disregard for civil liberties. Still, he ranks as one of our great Presidents. The how and why of this is embedded in A. Scott Berg's sweeping biography Wilson
A Scott Berg is a best selling biographer, a winner of the NationalBook Award and the Pulitzer Prize.
My conversation with Scott Berg: