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Separation of Powers and Legislative Organization - The President, the Senate, and Political Parties in the Making of House Rules (Paperback)
Loot Price: R958
Discovery Miles 9 580
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Separation of Powers and Legislative Organization - The President, the Senate, and Political Parties in the Making of House Rules (Paperback)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book examines how the constitutional requirements of the
lawmaking process, combined with the factional divisions within
parties, affect U.S. representatives' decisions about how to
distribute power among themselves. The incorporation of the
presidential, senatorial, and House factions in the analysis of
House rule making marks an important departure from previous
theories, which analyze the House as an institution that makes laws
in isolation. This book argues that, by constitutional design, the
success of the House in passing legislation is highly contingent on
the actions of the Senate and the president; and therefore, also by
constitutional design, House members must anticipate such actions
when they design their rules. An examination of major rule changes
from 1879 to 2013 finds that changes in the preferences of
constitutional actors outside the House, as well as the political
alignment of these political actors vis-a-vis House factions, are
crucial for predicting the timing and directionality of rule
changes."
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