Publisher's Synopsis
Democratic Dawn is the last book in the Greatest Game series, where Rupertheimer steers South Africa through the historic 1994 democratic elections, by outwitting his right-wing Afrikaner uncle Barefoot Battelle. Who's now been joined by Rupertheimer's old arch-enemy Killick Vokop, yet the canny Rupertheimer wins through, with the help of tough police General Kokkenbull. To finally arrive triumphantly, at the celebrated 1994 democratic elections, a glorious achievement unparalleled throughout history. Never before had a ruling elite willingly given up power, nowhere else had a single bold individual attained it, the Greatest Game series of books reveals who that remarkable individual was.
Yet ever since his schooldays Rupertheimer has been plagued by two fanatic liberals, Thorn Thompson and Dick Clott now edit Liberal Times, where they freely express their own liberal rights. Uncle Randlord Rupertheimer no longer owns newspapers, he has sold their media empire, which allows Thorn and Dick free rein to attack Rupertheimer. Liberal Times is now owned by Irish media mogul Darby O'Gill, who is too timid to control journalists, Randlord Rupertheimer remonstrates with his friend Darby but to no avail, Until the shocking British paedophilia scandal, where the unfettered UK press of Darby O'Gill hack celebrity phones, yet are silent about rampant paedophiles like Jimmy Savile,
Darby O'Gill is finally shamed into taking action, and he fires troublemakers Thorn Thompson and Dick Clott, who blame Rupertheimer and viciously strike back. In concert with an equally vengeful Killick Vokop, the embittered journalists stage a thieving raid on Hotazel Mine, but Rupertheimer and his now reformed uncle Barefoot Battelle thwart the diamond dogs. The series ends when the second generation, Roy Rupertheimer and Liza Jarvis marry, there is joy at the union but also a sombre warning. That the new millennium will bring three perils, terrorism and recession then a great plague, so a new champion named Will Powers braces the liberals in the follow up novel Hero of the Struggle.