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Changing the culture of Congress
Townhall.com ^ | 1/10/2006 | Bruce Bartlett

Posted on 01/10/2006 6:00:11 AM PST by FerdieMurphy

One of the unstated causes of the unfolding lobbying scandal swirling around Jack Abramoff is the extensive changes to the nature of both the membership and staffing of Congress over the last 30 years and a breakdown of longstanding legislative procedures.

These days, most congressional aides -- and even some of the members -- look like they are barely out of college. And although they may be smart and well educated, they have no depth of experience and no commitment to the Congress as an institution. They are simply there to get a line on their resume before going off to become lobbyists and make the big bucks.

It wasn't like that when I started work in the House of Representatives 30 years ago. A great many aides had made a career out of working on Capitol Hill, and it wasn't unusual to work with people who had been around for 20 or more years. There was a loyalty to their bosses and to the legislative process then that seems to have completely evaporated.

One reason for this is that the commitment of members of Congress to the institution and to good government has sharply waned. In 1976, when I first became a congressional aide, there were members around who had been elected in the 1920s -- Rep. Wright Patman, Democrat of Texas, is one in particular that I remember. He took office in 1929 and often talked about the financial difficulties his grandfather faced after the Civil War, which shaped Patman's own views about banks forever afterward.

Congressmen of that era weren't just marking time until they became lobbyists. Being a lobbyist to them was like being a prostitute -- it was something you did only when desperate. Their main goal was simply to acquire enough seniority to become a committee chairman, because that is where the real power in Congress was.

Congressmen like Wilbur Mills, Democrat of Arkansas and longtime chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, had enormous power to shape legislation, and smart presidents deferred to them and sought their advice before advancing a major proposal. For example, John F. Kennedy was very influenced by Mills in developing his 1963 tax plan, as we now know from White House tape recordings (online at www.whitehousetapes.org).

One way that chairmen maintained their power was by insisting that proper procedures be followed in the legislative process. Bills were referred to subcommittees, which held hearings and markups before sending them to the full committee. And then there would be more hearings and markups at the full committee level. Thorough committee reports were prepared and printed for each bill, so that every member had a clear idea of what the legislation would do long before it came up for a vote.

This was very time-consuming. It often took more than one Congress for major proposals to even get through one house, before the process started all over again in the other house. By the time a bill finally became law, it had been through the wringer several times, which helped ensure that everyone knew what was in it and how it would work, and every affected party had been heard from.

This system, which had served the country well for almost 200 years, started to break down in the 1970s, when liberal Democrats destroyed the seniority system in the House. This made it easier for them to move legislation, but also undermined the committee system itself. Also, when members knew they would no longer be rewarded automatically for service, you started to get faster turnover among members and staff, who took with them an enormous amount of institutional memory and commitment to the Congress as an institution.

When the Republicans took control in 1994, they destroyed what was left of the historical system. Most subcommittees were abolished. Major bills were brought up for committee votes without any hearings at all or even a draft bill that could be reviewed ahead of time. After a while, the Republicans even dispensed with committee markups, with the leadership using the Rules Committee to bring bills directly to the floor, often in the dead of night.

This trampling of the committee system helped give rise to the Abramoff scandal. A lobbyist no longer needed to know the substance of a bill or have long experience with the committee of jurisdiction. He just needed to know one guy in the leadership who could stick his proposal into a bill when no one was looking. By the time the bill was even printed, it would already be law.

The Republican leadership plans new restrictions on lobbying to protect themselves from Abramoff fallout. But a real reform would be to empower Congress's committees once again and make it harder for the leadership to act without proper oversight and deliberation.


TOPICS: Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: 109th; abramoff; brucebartlett; congress; congressrats
FYI.

Bartlett has made a career out of bureaucracy. Some of what he says makes sense, but a better congress would be one that is much leaner in respect to the staff that these clowns surround themselves with as insulation.

Many senators and congressmen are not very smart and rely on these staffers to write every word they utter in public. Teddy is an example. If one of his writers got PO'ed and wrote something like "Don't pay any attention to me. I'm just an old drunk who caused the death of a young girl," he'd probably get most of the way through it before he realized he had been set up.

He's typical.

Senators have over 60 people comprising their staff and the cost of maintaining staffs in both houses is over a billion dollars.

1 posted on 01/10/2006 6:00:14 AM PST by FerdieMurphy
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To: FerdieMurphy
"Don't pay any attention to me. I'm just an old drunk who caused the death of a young girl,"

Good one. I'd give five years of my life to hear him make that statement.

2 posted on 01/10/2006 6:41:16 AM PST by speedy
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To: FerdieMurphy
Many senators and congressmen are not very smart and rely on these staffers to write every word they utter in public.

This also provides a handy scapegoat. How many times in recent years have you heard a Congressman blame a "rogue staffer" for some shenanigans coming out of their office? Two that come to mind right away include Chuckie Schumer getting ahold of Michael Steele's credit report and the memo from Mel Martinez saying the Terri Schiavo case provided a great political opportunity for the Republicans.
3 posted on 01/10/2006 6:48:45 AM PST by drjimmy
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To: FerdieMurphy

THe author may be pushing for too much staff, but he's right about legislation being rammed through without consideration.

Even though I like some of the bills, every law passed in congress should see the light of day first so we all know what is happening. This dispensing of reading, and of the rules requiring 72-hour advance printing of bills before markup, is a major problem.

It doesn't help that the media no longer cares to report on what bills will do, they'd rather take the easier job of just being quote-machines, It's much simpler to just ask two people what they think, than it is to actually dig for the write-up of a bill and then read it and get someone to explain it.

But if we had all bills out a few days before the vote, it would give the new internet media plenty of time to dissect the measures and vet them. It would give time for people to call their representatives for support or to complain. It would keep congress from passing laws clearly meant to pay off contributers, or to waste money in order to buy votes for the next election.

Congress doesn't want us to see that (either party), which is why nothing happens. If Abramoff forces some common-sense changes like this, it will be a good thing for our country.


4 posted on 01/10/2006 6:51:06 AM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: FerdieMurphy

The committee system had its own problems with corruption. It placed too much power in the hands of committee chairmen. Reform may be needed to clean up the system, but going back to the committee system is wrong.


5 posted on 01/10/2006 7:29:31 AM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: FerdieMurphy
Senators have over 60 people comprising their staff and the cost of maintaining staffs in both houses is over a billion dollars.

I did not know that...............how the hell have we let things get this far gone?
More importantly, what are "We The People" gonna do about it?

6 posted on 01/10/2006 5:46:47 PM PST by MamaLucci (Mutually assured destruction STILL keeps the Clinton administration criminals out of jail.)
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To: MamaLucci
Short of a revolution, I am not certain how "We The People" are to proceed.

We keep electing Republicans, because it would make us puke to vote for a DemocRAT (many of their members belong to the communist party), but it does make us sick at our stomachs at how, once in power, they haven't a clue how to use that power.

If a true conservative (right-wing) party emerged many of us would surely climb aboard.

Some Freepers say to keep hammering at the Republicans, but I'm just about hammered out. I write and speak to them brashly and boldly and they reply as though they haven't read or heard what I said.

7 posted on 01/11/2006 7:51:54 AM PST by FerdieMurphy (For English, Press One. (Tookie, you won the Pulitzer and Nobel prizes. Oh, too late.))
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To: FerdieMurphy
If a true conservative (right-wing) party emerged many of us would surely climb aboard.

Yes, if there were a viable alternative to the GOP, the party would be in BIG trouble.

8 posted on 01/11/2006 1:35:04 PM PST by MamaLucci (Mutually assured destruction STILL keeps the Clinton administration criminals out of jail.)
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