Community Civics and Rural Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 466 pages of information about Community Civics and Rural Life.

Community Civics and Rural Life eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 466 pages of information about Community Civics and Rural Life.
Then a common practice is for the chairman to pocket the bill, delaying to report it to the house till too late to pass it.  When finally reported to the house, it goes on the calendar to be read a first time in its order.  Then begins the advancing of bills by unanimous consent, without waiting to reach them in order.  Here is where the organization has absolute control.  Unanimous consent is subject to the speaker’s acuteness of hearing.  His hearing is sharpened or dulled according to the good standing of the objector or of the member pushing the bill.  If one not friendly to the house “organization” wants to have his bill considered over an objection, he must move to suspend the rules.  The speaker may refuse to recognize him, or may put his motion and declare it carried or not carried as suits his and the organization’s desires.  So the pet bills are jumped over others ahead of them on the calendar, while

[Footnote:  From a pamphlet issued by the Illinois Legislative Voters’ League in 1903, and quoted by C. A. Beard, American Government and Politics, pp 539, 540.] the ones not having the backing of the house “organization” are retired farther and farther down until their ultimate passage becomes hopeless.  If the bill of the independent member reaches a second reading, it may be killed by striking out the enacting clause or by tacking on an obnoxious amendment that makes it repulsive to its former friends. ...  To carry out the will of the organization, the speaker declares amendments carried or the contrary by a viva voce vote.  Demands for roll-calls are ignored by him in violation of the members’ constitutional rights. ...

EFFORTS TO CURB POWER OF LEGISLATURES

It is such practices as these that have brought state legislatures into bad repute, and that have resulted in measures to curb their power.  Instead of leaving it entirely to them to make their own rules of procedure, many of these rules are now prescribed by the state constitutions.  It was in order to restrain the legislatures that the veto power has been given to the governors of all states but one, and that sessions of legislatures have been limited to brief periods of from forty to ninety days, and then only once in two years.  For the same reason state constitutions have taken away powers that legislatures once commonly abused, as in running the state deeply into debt, or in legislating in the interest of particular localities or particular groups; and have provided in great detail for many things that were formerly left to the discretion of the legislatures.  For the same reason some states have adopted the initiative and referendum.

Investigate and report on: 

Powers possessed by either house of your legislature not possessed by the other.

Powers denied your legislature by the federal Constitution.

Powers denied your legislature by your state constitution.  Reasons.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Community Civics and Rural Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.