Logotipo librería Marcial Pons
Why Congress

Why Congress

  • ISBN: 9780197657874
  • Editorial: Oxford University Press
  • Lugar de la edición: New York. Estados Unidos de Norteamérica
  • Encuadernación: Cartoné
  • Medidas: 23 cm
  • Nº Pág.: 322
  • Idiomas: Inglés

Papel: Cartoné
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Resumen

A bold defense of our nation's legislature and its ability to work through the country's deepest divisions, and a stark warning of what our political future holds if we allow Congress to decay.

Like it or not, our country's future depends on Congress. The Founding Fathers made a representative, deliberative legislature the indispensable pillar of the American constitutional system, giving it more power and responsibility than any other branch of government. Yet today, contempt for Congress is nearly universal. To a large extent, even members of Congress themselves are unable to explain and defend the value of their institution.

Why Congress takes on this challenge squarely, explaining why our increasingly divided politics demand a legislature capable of pitting factions against each other and forcing them to work out accommodations. This book covers the past, present, and future of the institution to understand how it has become so dysfunctional, but also to suggest how it might be restored. The book vividly shows how a healthy Congress made it possible for the country to work through some of its most difficult challenges, including World War II and the struggle for civil rights. But transformations that began in the 1970s ultimately empowered congressional leaders to suppress dissent within their own parties and frame a maximally divisive agenda. In stark contrast to the earlier episodes, where legislators secured durable political resolutions, in facing contemporary challenges, such as immigration and COVID-19, Congress has exacerbated divisions rather than searching for compromises with broad appeal. But Congress' power to organize itself suggests a way out. Wallach deftly explains that while Congress could accept its descent into decrepitude or cede its power to the president, a Madisonian revival of deliberation can yet restore our system of government's ability to work through deep divides.

Preface
1. What Congress Alone Can Do
Part I: When Congress Worked

2. Congress and World War II
3. The Achievement of Civil Rights
Part II: Congress Transformed
4. Cacophony - The Reforms of the 1970s
5. Conservatives against Congress
6. The Triumph of Partisan Posturing over Politics
Part III: The Costs of a Failing Congress
7. Failing to Compromise on Immigration
8. Congress and COVID: We Needed Leadership, They Gave us Cash
Part IV: Three Futures for Congress
9. Decrepitude
10. Rubber Stamp
11. Revival
Postscript: An Open Letter to America's Legislators

Resumen

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