Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The American Congress: Modern Trends
- 2 Representation and Lawmaking in Congress: The Constitutional and Historical Context
- 3 Congressional Elections and Policy Alignments
- 4 The Rules of the Legislative Game
- 5 Members, Goals, Resources, and Strategies
- 6 Parties and Leaders
- 7 The Standing Committees
- 8 The Floor and Voting
- 9 Congress and the President
- 10 Congress and the Courts
- 11 Congress, Lobbyists, and Interest Groups
- 12 Congress and Budget Politics
- Notes
- Suggested Readings
- Index
- Picture Credits
1 - The American Congress: Modern Trends
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 The American Congress: Modern Trends
- 2 Representation and Lawmaking in Congress: The Constitutional and Historical Context
- 3 Congressional Elections and Policy Alignments
- 4 The Rules of the Legislative Game
- 5 Members, Goals, Resources, and Strategies
- 6 Parties and Leaders
- 7 The Standing Committees
- 8 The Floor and Voting
- 9 Congress and the President
- 10 Congress and the Courts
- 11 Congress, Lobbyists, and Interest Groups
- 12 Congress and Budget Politics
- Notes
- Suggested Readings
- Index
- Picture Credits
Summary
Congress is an exciting place. real power resides in its members, real social conflicts are tamed or exacerbated by its actions, and thousands of people, most of them good public servants, walk its halls every day. Much good work is done there. In recent years, Congress has passed widely applauded bills that have, among other things, approved new security measures for airports and funding for the war against terrorism, granted important civil rights to women, minorities, and the disabled, given parents job protection so they can care for sick children, forced states to reduce barriers to voter registration and supported reforms of voting processes, expanded funding for college students, and limited what lobbyists can give to legislators.
Congress is a frustrating place as well. It is not easy to understand. Its sheer size – 535 members and more than 25,000 employees – is bewildering. Its system of parties, committees, and procedures, built up over 200 years, is remarkably complex and serves as an obstacle to public understanding. Perhaps most frustrating is that its work product, legislation, is the product of a process marked by controversy, partisanship, and bargaining. Even some members of Congress are uncomfortable with the sharp rhetoric and wheeling and dealing that are hallmarks of legislative politics.
But Congress is also important. No other national legislature has greater power than the Congress of the United States. Its daily actions affect the lives of all Americans and many people around the world.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The American Congress , pp. 1 - 24Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005