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Parliaments and Legislatures Series Samuel C. Patterson, General Advisory Editor PDF

199 Pages·2007·12.65 MB·English
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Parliaments and Legislatures Series Samuel C. Patterson, General Advisory Editor Parliaments and Legislatures Series General Advisory Editor Samuel C. Patterson, Ohio State University, USA The aims of this series are to enhance knowledge about the well-established legislative assemblies of North America and western Europe and to pub­ lish studies of parliamentary assemblies worldwide—from Russia and the former Soviet bloc nations to Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The series is open to a wide variety of theoretical applications, historical dimensions, data collections, and methodologies. Editorial Board Janet Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University, USA David W. Brady, Stanford University, USA Gary W. Cox, University of California, San Diego, USA Erik Damgaard, University of Aarhus, Denmark C. E. S. Franks, Queen's University, Canada John R. Hibbing, University of Nebraska, USA Keith Jackson, University of Canterbury, New Zealand Carlos Flores Juberfas, University of Valencia, Spain Gerhard Loewenberg, University of Iowa, USA Werner J. Patzelt, Dresden Technical University, Germany Thomas F. Remington, Emory University, USA Suzanne S. Schiittemeyer, Universitat Liineburg, Germany liter Turan, K09 University, Turkey Hitching a Ride Omnibus Legislating in the U.S. Congress GLEN S. KRUTZ Ohio State University Press Columbus Copyright © 2001 by The Ohio State University. All rights reserved. Library of Congress Catologing-in-Publication Data Krutz, Glen S. Hitching a ride : omnibus legislating in the U. S. Congress / Glen S. Krutz. p. cm.— (Parliaments and legislatures series) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8142-0870-3 (cloth) —ISBN 0-8142-5071-8 (pbk.) 1. Legislation—United States. I. Title. II. Series. KF4945 .K78 2001 32873*0778—dc21 00-012684 Text design by Nighthawk Design. Jacket design by David Drummond. Type set in Adobe Caslon by Bookcomp. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48-1992. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 For Julie, Matthew, Ryan, and Rachel Contents Foreword ix Acknowledgments xiii 1 Focusing Attention on Omnibus Legislation 1 2 The Nature of Congressional Change: Literature and Theory 16 3 The Logic of Omnibus Legislation: An Integrated Theoretical Framework 30 4 Studying Omnibus Lawmaking Systematically 44 5 Hitching a Ride on the Omnibus 61 6 Explaining the Move to Omnibus Legislating 77 7 The Birth of Omnibus Legislating: Why the 81st Congress Bundled the Budget 88 8 Getting around Gridlock I: Making Health Care Policy through Omnibus BiEs 102 9 Getting around Gridlock II: The Effect of Omnibus Utilization on Legislative Productivity 112 10 The Omnibus Change and Presidential-Congressional Relations 124 11 Evaluating Omnibus Legislating 135 Appendix 1 Constructing a Data Set of Bills per Congress 143 Appendix 2 The Policy Agendas Project Topic and Subtopic Categories 145 viii Contents Notes 159 Bibliography 167 Index 179 Foreword The United States Congress engages resolutely and routinely in the fashion­ ing and enactment of laws. It is in the primacy of its lawmaking role that the U.S. Congress is distinguishable from most other national parliaments. Because Congress is, first and foremost, a lawmaking body, its legislative workload and performance are of prime significance in coming to under­ stand the institution. Moreover, the congressional workload is relatively quite large in volume and complexity. In the 1990s several thousand bills and res­ olutions were introduced in the average Congress (for instance, 7,532 bills and 200 joint resolutions were introduced in the 105th Congress, which sat from 1997 to 1999). And, on the average in the 1990s, each Congress, in its two-year lifetime, enacted about four hundred public bills. In short, the congressional agenda of legislative work is somewhat daunting in scope. As the demand for legislative productivity has expanded, congressional leaders have adopted a variety of strategies to cope with the escalating workload. One strategy entails merging a number of legislative proposals that otherwise might be considered independently into a single, overarching bill, aptly called "omnibus legislation." This practice of "pack­ aging" or "bundling" a number of legislative proposals into one large leg­ islative measure has been engaged in for about half a century. Dubbed "mega-bills" by congressional scholar Roger Davidson, the first significant omnibus bill was the Omnibus Appropriation Act of 1950, which at the time was the largest appropriation bill in the history of the Republic. Since then, omnibus bills frequently have concerned financial legislation—bud- geting, appropriations, taxing—but other issue areas have experienced omnibus legislating as well. An early instance was President Jimmy Carter's 1977 national energy plan, considered by Congress in the form of an omnibus package. This energy package came to be considered by nineteen committees of the House of Representatives, epitomizing the growing practice of "multiple referral" of bills to committees and precipitating the emergence of leadership mechanisms designed to coordinate congressional handling of complex legislation. IX x Foreword As Glen Krutz carefully demonstrates, omnibus legislating has grown in use, apparently peaking in the 1980s at about one-fifth of all major leg­ islation. Although only a minority of congressional bills are of the omnibus type, some of the most important legislation of the contemporary era have taken the form of omnibus measures. Since the passage of the Congres­ sional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which reshaped the congressional budget process, most omnibus bills have involved budget legislation. Because of the centrality of budget issues to the national policy debate today, omnibus legislation has become a highly important congres­ sional practice. Yet mega-bill processing by Congress has heretofore been only rarely studied systematically. Accordingly, Krutz's seminal, meticulous, and wide-ranging analysis of omnibus legislating makes a very significant contribution to understanding the legislative process in Congress. Krutz develops empirical desiderata for identifying omnibus bills in Congress, and then carefully assays the historical development of omnibus legislating. Having established the incidence of mega-bills, Krutz brings down upon this growing congressional practice the impressive armamen­ tarium of modern empirical research technology: computer database devel­ opment and multivariate analytical procedures. The upshot is a highly orig­ inal and probing examination of omnibus legislating, suffused with savvy of congressional politics and procedures, sensitive theoretical insights, and pertinent historical grounding. The author delineates the development of legislative packaging and explains why congressional leaders have come to employ mega-bills for important legislation. The complexity of modern public policy issues, especially those arising in the budgetary process, and the intricacy of contemporary congressional politics, have given rise to omnibus legislating. Krutz's trenchant analysis focuses on how omnibus legislating is invoked to confront problems of policy gridlock in order to enhance Congress's legislative productivity, and how mega-bills reflect and influence relations between Congress and the president. In the end, he observes, "Much major lawmaking is undertaken with this method, and a significant proportion of legislative initiatives in Congress see the light at the end of the legislative process because they become attached to omnibus bills." It is, therefore, the case that "omnibus bills alter the traditional lawmaking process in many ways." Finally, Krutz draws upon his extensive research, including interviews with congressional "insiders/7 to take stock of the modern U.S. Congress complete with its omnibus lawmaking ways. Weighing the shortcomings and benefits of omnibus legislating, at the end of the day Krutz concludes

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6 Explaining the Move to Omnibus Legislating. 77. 7 The Birth legislative packaging and explains why congressional leaders have come to employ . stiehl 1997; Browne 1995; Cameron, Howell, Adler, and Riemann 2000; .. Members gain two benefits as they delegate power to leaders and sacrifice.
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