Title: CONGRESSIONAL ORIGINS AND HISTORY
1CONGRESSIONAL ORIGINS AND HISTORY
2Pre-Constitutional Predecessors
- British Parliament
- State legislatures
- Continental Congress
- --power inadequacies
- --procedural inadequacies
3VOTING CYCLE example
- Three proposals New York, Annapolis, Charleston
- NORTH NYC Annapolis Charleston
- MIDDLE Annap. Charleston NYC
- SOUTH Charleston NYC Annapolis
- NYC v. Annapolis --- NYC wins
- NYC v. Charleston --- Charleston wins
- Annap. V. Charleston --- Annapolis wins
4THREE VOTING CYCLE LESSONS
- Any alternative can be defeated by a majority
- Depending on which pair is voted on first, a
different city wins - If there is no set procedure for narrowing and
pairing alternatives, voting can go on
indefinitely with no conclusive decision
5POWERS OF CONGRESS
- Enumerated powers many were specific responses
to Confederation Congress problems - Elastic clause 1 necessary and proper
McCullough vs. Maryland (1819) - Elastic clause 2 commerce among the several
states - --19th Century definition fairly literal
- --Post-New Deal definition broad, basis for
Civil Rights Act of 1964 and many other
laws---BUT does US v. Lopez (1995) signify a new
trend?
6LIMITATIONS ON CONGRESSIONAL POWER
- In the original text of Constitution no ex post
facto laws, bills of attainder - In the Bill of RightsRecent examples of Federal
laws struck down as unconstitutional original
Federal Election Campaign Act (1976), anti-flag
burning law (1990), Line-Item Veto Law (1998),
Religious Freedom Restoration Act (1997)
7STRUCTURAL DECISIONS MADE BY FOUNDERS
- 1.) BicameralismConnecticut compromise, other
reasonsDoes small state bias in Senate make a
difference today? - --funding formulas--issues of interest to
farmers and country people (guns, grazing
rights)--do small states have a leadership
advantage? - Each chamber makes its own rules of procedure,
elects its own leaders
8STRUCTURAL DECISIONS contd
- 2.) Complete separation from executive
- --separate elections, separate fixed term
lengths--no simultaneous service (prevents a
parliamentary-style system) - --limited executive use of prosecutorial power
against Congress (immunity) - 3.) Yet shared and overlapping powers
w/executive - ---judicial selection
- ---confirmation of executive appointments
- ---creating and funding executive branch agencies
- ---foreign policy/defense Congress declares war
and raises and supports armies, but President
is commander-in-chief
9THE EARLY YEARS, 1790s-1820s
- The first Congresses high turnover, no
professionalization, ad hoc committees, executive
leadership - 1806 Senate eliminates previous question
motion creates filibuster - EMERGENCE OF PARTIES
- John Aldrich, Why Parties?
- 1.) Stable coalitions eliminate voting cycles,
improves legislative productivity (stable
coalitions achieved thru logrolling and papering
over differences) - 2.) Brand name motivates voters and simplifies
voting - 3.) Economies of scale achieved for campaigns
- 4.) Presidential leadership made easier
- 5.) Regulation and reduction of destructive
ambition
10EARLY YEARS, 1790-1820s continued
- EMERGENCE OF STANDING COMMITTEES IN THE HOUSE AND
SENATE - HOUSE aftermath of War of 1812
- a.) death of the Federalists growing
factionalization of Republicans emergence of
Democrats - b.) financial mismanagement by executive branch
- c.) growing congressional workload increased
constituent demands (election of 1814) - Standing committee structure pretty much complete
by 1822 - SENATE happened more or less all at once
11Late 19th Century Golden Age of Parties on
Capitol Hill
- The pre-Civil War party system Whigs vs.
Democrats, competitive nationwide - Post-Civil War heavily regionalized party
system, leading to safe districts and lower
turnover - High intraparty homogeneity and interparty
heterogeneity led to conditions for strong party
leadership in both chambers
12Golden Age of Parties contd
- Reeds rules began with elimination of
disappearing quorum, continued with increased
use of House Rules Committee as leadership tool - Czar Cannons amazing tripod of power
- (committee system, scheduling, floor debate)
- --increasing conflict within the GOP Old
Guard vs. Progressives
13Golden Age of Parties, Contd
- First challenge 1909 Calendar Wednesday
- Revolt in 1910 led by Norris motion to strip
Speaker of Czar powers - Democrats and King Caucus
14The Textbook Congress 1920s-1970s
- Growing decentralization, weakening parties, and
member independence due to - --Australian ballot
- --Primary elections replaced SFR method of
nomination - --Norm of continuing committee assignments
- --Direct election of Senators (1913)
- --Continued regional/ideological division within
both parties
15Textbook Congress continued
- EMERGENCE OF SENIORITY SYSTEM
- --committee assignments
- --committee chairmanships
- --leadership succession (esp. Democrats)
- EMERGENCE OF CONSERVATIVE COALITION during FDRs
second term - (How seniority system benefited the South)
- Speaker Sam Rayburn (1940-1961) bargaining,
accommodative style of leadership
16Textbook Congress Contd
- Donald Matthews, US Senators and Their World
(1960) - Mid-20th Century norms observed by Matthews
apprenticeship, specialization, reciprocity, be a
workhorse not a showhorse, institutional
patriotism, courtesy - Consequences of violating norms?
17End of the Textbook Congress
- SEEDS OF REFORM
- --1958 midterm electionscreated disparity
between caucus and committee chairs 39.3 of
House Democrats were Southern, but 61.9 of
committee chairs were Southern - --formation of Democratic Study Group (DSG)
- Expansion of Rules Committee in 1961
18End of the Textbook Congress
- The Revolt Against the Committee Chairs of
early 1970s - 1.) revitalization of Caucus committee chair
interviews and approval by Caucus - 2.) Subcommittee Bill of Rights (decentralizing)
- 3.) POWER GIVEN BACK TO SPEAKER(centralizing)
- --appoint Dems on Rules Committee
- --more power over committee assignments
- --power of multiple referral and ad hoc
committees - 4.) Greater openness
- --more recorded votes (electronic voting)
- --open committee hearings, C-SPAN
19The Post-Reform Congress, 1975-present
- Party voting and party unity increased greatly in
the 1980s---why? - 1.) Aftereffects of Voting Rights Act of 1965
- 2.) Growth of GOP in South (transplants,
converts, and generational change)effects on
primary elections - 3.) Reaganism and the centralization/fiscalizati
on of politics - 4.) More aggressive party leadership?
- ---increasing use of rules to limit members
options, more omnibus bills
20The Post-Reform Congress Contd
- --party leaders more involved in recruiting and
funding their parties candidates (e.g.
leadership PACs) - --Better socialization/inclusion of new members
- The Republican Revolution of 1994
- PRELUDE Gingrichs COS hardball tactics, Jim
Wrights unprecedented use of power, big turnover
in 1992 due to unique factors
21POST-REFORM Congress contd
- 1994 CAMPAIGN Contract w/America, morphing into
Clinton - SPEAKER GINGRICHs FIRST 100 DAYS
- --handpicked, dominated, and bypassed committees
- --reorganization of committee system
- --term limits on leadership positions
- --some attempt at increasing minority rights
22POST-REFORM CONGRESS CONTD
- GINGRICHS DOWNFALL
- --Budget Showdown with Clinton 95-96
- --Emerging ideological/regional splits with GOP
- --Senate stymies Contract
- --1996 Year of Cooperation (min. wage, welfare
reform, health care) - --Gingrichs ethics, attempted coup
- --Impeachment fiasco the final blow---1998
elections
23POST-REFORM Congress Contd
- Unified Republican Govt. (on and off)
- --Hastert, Armey, Delay
- --2001 -- Jeffords defection
- --continued conflict with Senate (Sinclair)
- --Bush legislative victories
- --2002 and 2004 elections
24CATCHING UP WITH THE SENATE
- --Senate always more individualistic and more
deliberative (filibuster, no restrictions on
amendments) - --Interlocking directorate of party leaders in
late 1800s Nelson Aldrich (R-RI), William
Allison (R-Iowa), Platt (R-CT), Spooner (R-WI) - Strong party discipline but no Czars
- 1899 decentralization of Appropriations
- Majority and minority leader positions created in
1913 - Direct election didnt change much
25CATCHING UP WITH THE SENATE
- Outstanding majority and minority leaders known
more for personal characteristics than
institutional power(LBJs Johnson treatment,
Byrds knowledge of rules, Mitchell and Frist
selected because of media skills) - The Johnson rule spread out committee
assignments more - END OF HISTORY SECTION