On appreciating Congress
the people's branch
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Author
Publication
2009 - Paradigm Publishers, Boulder, Colo, Colorado
Language
English
Word Count
48,000 words, Guess
Page Count
192 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-139781594517945
- ISBN-101594517940
- Library of Congress Control Number2009027138
- OCLC Control Number320192522
- Open LibraryOL23606864M
Classifications
- DDC328.73
- LCCJK1041 .F57 2009
Description
This book explains why Congress is the indispensable institution for safeguarding popular, democratic, and constitutional government. Even though its record over the past two centuries presents a mixed picture, the record of the other two branches is also decidedly mixed. The author has worked for Congress for the past four decades and writes from a perspective that intimately understands its shortcomings while appreciating its strengths. He contends that portraying Congress as so inherently inept that it must be kept subordinate to presidential or judicial power is misguided and uninformed. The Constitution looks to Congress as the first branch because it is the institution through which citizens at the local and state level engage in self-government. Although Presidents claim to be the national representative, they cannot substitute for the knowledge and legitimacy brought by members of Congress. Congress, after all, is the people's branch and this book restores it to its rightful claim.
Subjects
Series Statement
- On politics
Other Editions
- On appreciating Congress
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