Peter Hanson, "Too Weak to Govern: Majority Party Power and Appropriations in the U.S. Senate" (Cambridge UP, 2014)

Summary

Just a few weeks ago, we heard Matthew Green discuss the minority in the House. Green explained that the minority party may not be as powerless as we typically think. In Too Weak to Govern: Majority Party Power and Appropriations in the U.S. Senate (Cambridge University Press, 2014), Peter Hanson offers another side of a similar story. Hanson argues that the majority party in the Senate, more restrained by rule and convention than in the House, has an equally interesting story to tell. Hanson draws on his experience as a staffer for Senator Tom Daschle to explain the evolution of "regular order" and emergence of continuing resolutions as a tool of the majority. Hanson's analysis may not convince you to love the Senate, but he sheds needed light on what's behind the maddening procedures of the "world's greatest deliberative body." Hanson is an assistant professor of political science at the University of Denver.

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