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The President Proposes and Congress Disposes—But Not Always: Legislative Initiative on Capitol Hill

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

Recurring and fundamental questions about policy-making in the United States focus on Congress' ability to initiate legislation. Does Congress lead? How and when? Are conditions changing to enhance or inhibit congressional initiative?

Nearly all commentators on the legislative process see the president's leadership as natural. But many have argued that he has become the dominant or even exclusive initiator of major legislation. House Republican Leader John Rhodes recently wrote that “Congress has served as little more than a glorified echo chamber for the Executive Branch of government—usually content to approve or disaprove [sic], rarely willing to initiate.” Former Senator Mike Monroney asked, “Is Congress still capable of initiating and enacting its own legislative program?”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1974

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References

1 Washington Post, January 21, 1974, p. A-20.

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14 For a partial list see Johannes, John R., “Congress and the Initiation of Legislation,” Public Policy, XX (Spring, 1972), 282Google Scholar, note 7. See also Price, Who Makes the Laws?; Peabody, Robert L. et al. , To Enact a Law: Congress and Campaign Financing (New York, 1972)Google Scholar; Nadel, Mark V., The Politics of Consumer Protection (Indianapolis, 1971)Google Scholar; McAdams, Alan K., Power and Politics in Labor Legislation (New York, 1964)Google Scholar; and Chaples, Ernest A. Jr, “Congress Gets New Ideas from Outside Experts,” in To Be a Congressman: The Promise and the Power, eds. Groennings, Sven and Hawley, Jonathan P. (Washington, D.C., 1973), pp. 169–83Google Scholar. For an analysis of congressional influence and initiative based on some of these and many more case studies, see Moe, Ronald and Teel, Steven, “Congress as Policy-Maker: A Necessary Reappraisal,” Political Science Quarterly, LXXXV (09, 1970), 443–70CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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