Congress
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SOURCE: The Guardian
6/1/2023
The Debt Ceiling Law is now a Tool of Partisan Political Power; Abolish It
by Mark Weisbrot
There is no "ticking bomb" of national debt; the use of the debt ceiling to threaten the nation with default to secure spending cuts that damage Democratic presidents is by now a clearly established partisan trick, and the US government should no longer be held hostage to it, says an economic policy researcher.
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SOURCE: NPR
4/29/2023
Financial Historian Kathleen Day on the Origins and History of the Debt Ceiling
Is the debt ceiling, which has been raised 78 times since being established by Congress during World War I, a useful periodic reminder of fiscal restraint or an outdated relic that has become a weapon for partisan extortionists? Kathleen Day discusses the ceiling with NPR's Scott Simon.
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SOURCE: Made By History at the Washington Post
3/24/2023
Rep. Patricia Schroeder's Career Shows Real Effects of Electing More Women
by Sarah B. Rowley
Policymakers have too often ignored women's lived experiences in many areas when legislating. The late Congresswoman from Colorado showed how those experiences could be represented.
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SOURCE: WNYC
3/14/2023
Anastasia Curwood on Shirley Chisholm's Childhood Heroes
Born in Barbados, Shirley Chisholm moved to Brooklyn as a child. Her biographer discusses how her childhood heroes shaped her political worldview.
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SOURCE: New York Times
3/14/2023
Former US Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D-CO) Dies at 82
Elected as a Vietnam war opponent in 1972, Schroeder's service on the Armed Services Commitee helped to change the status of women in the military. She also was a reliable source of a biting political quip and a fierce advocate for women in elected office.
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SOURCE: Made By History at the Washington Post
1/24/2023
McCarthy Kicking Dems off Key Committees Isn't Just Retaliation, it's Enabling the GOP Agenda
by Josh Kluever
McCarthy's use of "anti-American" in his rhetorical objections to particular Democrats suggests he wants to eliminate prominent Democrats from positions where they can object to Republican policies in House committees and police the boundaries of acceptable political opinion.
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SOURCE: New York Times
1/23/2023
The 14th Amendment Should Put a Stop to Debt Ceiling Hostage Taking
by Eric Foner
The provisions of the Reconstruction Amendments dealing with the national debt were tied to the nation's short-lived commitment to interracial democracy in the South; today they offer the Biden administration a possible tool to use if Congress pushes to the brink of default.
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SOURCE: The New Republic
1/6/2023
The Constitutional Case for Demolishing the Debt Ceiling
by Thomas Geoghegan
The Founders would find the debt ceiling a ludicrous concept; it's time to take this instrument of blackmail out of the legislative process. The Biden administration should provoke a court fight over the law as an unconstitutional limit on the government's ability to pay its debts.
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1/4/2023
Republicans (Finally) Rally Around McCarthy as Speaker
Kevin McCarthy has secured the speakership through apparent deals allowing a group of right-wing hardliners to have greater influence over legislation and more investigative power. Historians followed the voting and discuss what comes next.
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SOURCE: Washington Post
1/3/2022
The Constitution Won't Be Much Help Resolving the Speaker Mess
While the Constitution requires the House to choose it's speaker, it gives no guidance how. Usually custom and party discipline are sufficient to accomplish the task, but not always.
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SOURCE: Washington Post
10/5/2022
Will a Cherokee Nation Delegate be Seated in Congress?
Even without a vote in Congress, Delegates can use the privileges of their position to make a difference. Kimberly Teehee's potential seating as the Cherokee Nation's delegate would create a dedicated voice for Native issues.
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SOURCE: CNN
11/28/2021
Carrie Meek, Trailblazing Black Congresswoman, Dies at 95
Carrie Meek was the daughter of sharecroppers and the granddaughter of a slave; she was elected to Congress from Florida in 1992 as one of the first Black representatives since Reconstruction.
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SOURCE: Washington Post
9/13/2021
The History of the Debt Ceiling: How a Routine Procedure Became Routine Political Brinksmanship
It's clear that the originators of legislation establishing a debt limit for the United States did not intend for the measure to be a land mine threatening to derail the government's operations on a recurring basis.
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SOURCE: NPR
4/20/2021
Stuck At 435 Representatives? Why The U.S. House Hasn't Grown With Census Counts
Legislation passed in 1929 sets a cap on the size of the US House of Representatives, making the decennial census a high-stakes battle for precious seats. Expanding the House would make it more democratic and avoid taking existing seats away.
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SOURCE: MSNBC
4/11/2021
Trump-Loving White Women are Protecting Matt Gaetz. History Tells Us Why
by Keisha N. Blain
While the allegations of potentially criminal sexual conduct by Rep. Matt Gaetz are shocking, it should not be shocking that conservative white women have closed ranks in support of the Congressman.
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SOURCE: Substack
4/5/2021
The Closer You Look, the Worse it Gaetz
by Claire Potter
"It appears that Gaetz went to Washington to fight a culture war and stayed for the parties."
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SOURCE: KARE
3/18/2021
U of M Professor Testifies During Hearing on Anti-Asian Violence
Historian Erika Lee testified to Congress on Thursday about anti-Asian violence in the United States, in a hearing scheduled before the killing of eight people in metro Atlanta highlighted the urgency of the issue.
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SOURCE: The New Republic
3/4/2020
How Did "Bipartisanship" Become a Goal In Itself? (Podcast)
TNR's "Politics of Everything" podcast discusses how bipartisanship came to be the end of politics instead of a means to achieve other goals. Features historian Julian Zelizer.
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SOURCE: New York Times
2/5/2021
Marjorie Taylor Greene Knows Exactly What She's Doing
by Jamelle Bouie
Historians Lisa McGirr, Sara Diamond, and Daniel Schlozman and Sam Rosenfeld argue that the Republican Party has always had to keep a porous border between itself and the hard right groups who led its activist base since the Goldwater years. The borders today seem to be dissolving.
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2/4/2021
How Do You Solve a Problem Like Marjorie?
The House of Representatives has voted, mostly on party lines, to remove Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene from her committee assignments in response to her statements endorsing the Capitol riots and conspiracy theories that school shootings were hoaxes and California wildfires were started by the Rothschild banking family using space lasers.
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