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Chapters 8 and 9

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Title: Chapters 8 and 9


1
Chapters 8 and 9
  • Policy making in the USA

2
The architecture of American Politics
  • Presidential Democracy (as opposed to
    parliamentary democracy)
  • Separation of Powers supported by a sophisticated
    system of checks and balances.
  • Horizontally
  • Vertically
  • Judicial Common law system

3
Architecture of the system (cont.)
  • Election system favors the development of 2
    umbrella political parties instead of multiple
    parties representing different positions of the
    ideological spectrum

4
Qualities of the system
  • Decentralized but orderly providing a lot of
    space of hearing interest groups.
  • Biased towards stability which can actually turn
    into gridlock
  • Disconnection with politics clientelism lack
    of accountability towards voters
  • Tendency to favor narrow interests because of
    their ability to influence the process.

5
Policy making in the United States (chapter 9)
  • Policy-making systems make most public policy.
  • Networks of small, stable groups of people who
    control the operating decisions of specific
    government agencies of specific programs. They
    are called systems because they are predictable
    and involve a high level of interaction and
    feedback
  • The people
  • Elected President, Congressmen, Senators
  • Unelected Lobbyists, professional staff, and
    full time bureaucrats

6
Limited capabilities
  • Difficulties making big changes
  • Presidential Democracy -- decentralization
  • Final decisions emerge from compromise, the
    result of pulling and pushing framed by public
    and private interests.
  • Unintended consequences are the norm

7
How a bill becomes Law
  • Bills are introduced by members of the
    legislature but many of them are actually
    initially drafted by executive branch officials.
  • Subcommittee
  • Decides whether to hold hearings on a bill that
    has been introduced.
  • Sends mark up bills to Committee
  • Committee
  • Further discusses
  • Approves bill which goes then to chamber

8
How a bill becomes Law (cont)
  • Chambers
  • Rules committee includes in Congress agenda
  • Leadership informal discussions decides whether
    to include in Senates agenda.
  • Amendments (more or less germane) deal
    brokering in the Senate maybe filibuster.

9
How a bill becomes Law (cont)
  • When approved Bill is passed to the other
    chamber. Alternatively both chambers can be
    discussing it simultaneously.
  • If the language of the bill differs largely
    leaders of the committees engage meet in
    conference to reconcile the language.
  • Bill is sent to the White House of action.
  • President signs within 10 days or it become law
    by default unless the session finishes before the
    10 days.
  • President vetos the bill. The whole bill. Can
    only be overcome by a 2/3 majority vote in the
    chambers.

10
How a bill becomes Law (cont)
  • The bill goes back to the chambers for
    Authorization and Appropriation.
  • Most Bills are funded for 2 years
  • Some Bills (social security, food stamps are
    entitlement programs they must receive funding

11
Post-legislative process
  • A bureaucratic agency clarifies the law, making
    it workable by eliminating ambiguities and
    developing well-defined procedures for
    implementation.
  • This process involves hearings followed by a
    discussion in the agencies.
  • The result is the definition of its actual impact
    on business.
  • It is written mostly by not elected officials
  • There is space for more lobbying

12
Post-legislative process (cont.)
  • The law is published in the Federal Register
  • Many agencies rules are subject to constant
    review.
  • Agencies have enforcement duties.
  • They also have judicial ones. In fact parties
    who feel the bill just passed does not serve well
    their interest can use the regulars or
    administrative courts to challenge it.

13
Iron Triangle
American Dairy Assoc.
Campaign contributions
Support for ADA policy agenda
Price support for dairy products
Interchange of personnel
Information
Support of Dep. budget
Sen. House Agri. Committees
Dep. of Agriculture
Expert information, political support
14
Alternative paths
  • Executive orders
  • Direct ballots voted in states (e.g. California,
    Massachusetts)

15
Criticism of the regulatory process
  • Undemocratic
  • Failing to respond to majority demand
  • Giving too much power to narrow interest groups
  • Criticism to the moral and capacity of the
    bureaucracy

16
Types of policies and politics
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