The Imperial Congress: Crisis in the Separation of Powers |  | Creators: Newt Gingrich, Gordon S. Jones, John A. Marini Publisher: World Almanac Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $24.94 (100%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1187533
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 6 x 1.3
ISBN: 0886874084 Dewey Decimal Number: 320.473 EAN: 9780886874087 ASIN: 0886874084
Publication Date: February 15, 1989 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
Two presidents in recent history, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, were elected with a mandate to reduce the scale of government, but met resistance from an increasingly dominant Congress and its allied agencies. In The Imperial Congress (The Heritage Foundation/The Claremont Institute), Washington experts take a revealing look at the constitutional crisis posed by Congress as it is today, explain why this has happened, and offer workable solutions to prevent it in the future.
In three parts the authors:
* Explore the origins and growth of the bureaucratic state in this century * Explain how Congress works today, and how long incumbencies, huge staffs, and connections to special interest groups enable individual members to augment and maintain their power * Discuss the effects of such power in domestic and foreign policies * Focus on strategies for restoring the vital separation of powers, the cornerstone of our constitution.
For Washington insiders, students of government, and all concerned citizens, The Imperial Congress provides insightful and provocative reading.
The contributors to The Imperial Congress include: Charles R. Kesler, Adjunct Fellow of The Claremont Institute; Douglas A. Jeffrey, Director of Scholarship at The Claremont Institute; John Adams Wettergreen, Professor of Political Science at San Jose University; Michael E. Hammond, General Counsel to the Senate Steering Committee; Peter M. Weyrich, Writer and analyst at the Free Congress Center for Child and Family Policy; Margaret Davis, Legislative Assistant for Senator Phil Gramm; W. Mark Crain, Professor of Economics at George Mason University; L. Gordon Crovitz, Assistant Editor of the Editorial Page of The Wall Street Journal and Thomas G. West, Associate Professor of Politics at the University of Dallas.
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15 years later, parts of it are still worth a read November 2, 2001 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Ah, the Reagan years ... when Newt Gingrich was a rising star, Bill Clinton was an obscure Southern governor, and Republicans knew Congress was the enemy. Within just a few years, the same people and institutions who railed against the 'imperial Congress' would find themselves in control of that institution. By that time, the White House was the enemy again, and Republicans devoted their energy and determination to rolling back the presidency and using Congress as an engine of 'reform.'As a monument of that earlier, innocent era, this book has three elements: an indictment of Congressional abuses of power, an analysis of the 'separation of powers' doctrine, and policy prescriptions for the late 1980s and beyond. Of these, the last is largely outdated now and the first is incomplete: the problem isn't that Congress is too powerful vis-a-vis the presidency, or vice versa, but rather that *both* branches have far too much power (just for good measure, so does the judiciary), and *both* should be severely, brutally, uncompromisingly scaled back. The middle element, the analysis of 'separation of powers,' still stands up fifteen years later, however, and is worth a read for students of political science.
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