- Summary
- Contents
- Subject index
This comprehensive reference offers a complete institutional history of Congress. The 35 chapters of Guide to Congress, Seventh Edition, are divided into eight subject areas that cover all aspects of the U.S. Congress: Origins and Development of Congress, from the constitutional beginnings of the legislative branch to the histories of the House and Senate and their power shifts, eras of partisanship and unity, influential leaders, and working relationships with presidents. Coverage includes analysis of the tug-of-war between House Democrats and the George W. Bush administration on Iraq war withdrawal timetables, updates on criminal investigations of House members, including William J. Jefferson of Louisiana and Charles Rangel of New York, and analysis of the Tea Party Movement and new Republican majority. Powers of Congress, including powers ...
Chapter 23: Lobbying
Lobbying
“America is no longer a nation. It is a committee of lobbies,” Charles Peters, the curmudgeonly editor of the Washington Monthly, wrote in 1978. “Politicians no longer ask what is in the public interest, because they know no one else is asking. Instead they're giving each group what it wants.”1 The complaint was not a ...
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