
James G. D'Angelo
@jamesgdangelo
Poli-sci guy focused on pitfalls of transparency and special interest capture. Ex-NASA dork. Check out our Foreign Affairs piece "Dark Side of Sunlight."
ID: 2329526714
https://congressionalresearch.org/Citations.html 05-02-2014 23:56:13
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t o r i š©· Congress can repeal the IEEPA and assorted other trade acts tomorrow, which would take away Trump's authority.

Giving presidents the power to raise tariffs on a whim was madness. CONGRESS: "But we didn't! The 1977 law only allows it if there's a national emergency and an extraordinary foreign threat to the US!" Who decides if it's a national emergency? CONGRESS: "The president." š¤·āāļø

Sarah Binder Sarah Binder does not study secrecy. She focuses on gridlock. And the difference is crucial. Here she uses (often flimsy) gridlock data to attack the notion of a "secret Congress," relying entirely on numbers originally generated to measure gridlock. This thread of hers


Fareed Zakaria Wow, Robert Kagan has come a long way. In 2003, Kagan wrote what might have been the longest book review on record: "The Ungreat Washed: Why democracy must remain America's Goal abroad" It was a scathing - yet beautifully written, 10,000 word take down of Fareed Zakaria's


Fareed Zakaria The cover of The New Republic (July 7th & 14th 2003) boasts a different title, but still featuring Kagan's unfettered embrace of democracy - despite the populistic tendencies. "Idealism without apologies" - "Why There's No Such Thing as Too Much Democracy." Contrast this







