Chapter 13 Collateral Reading
Assignments

American Government, Readings and Cases, by Peter Woll (12th
& 13th eds.)
1. Federalist 53, 56, 57, 58, 62 and 63,
James Madison
The functions of the House and Senate are fundamentally different.
The House, popularly elected for a two-year term, stands close to the people
and represents popular interests on matters of local concern. Senators,
indirectly elected for staggered six-year terms, are more detached, deliberative,
and conservative. A primary responsibility of the Senate is to act as a
conservative check on the House.
2. Media Power and Congressional Power,
Timothy E. Cook
Television has transformed congressional politics in many ways. Members
of Congress often spend as much time with the media as they do on their
own legislative work. Media exposure is essential not only to reelection
but to a successful Capitol Hill career.
3. Why Americans Hate Congress,
Richard Morin and David S. Broder
Perceived partisan bickering is a major reason for public disillusionment
with Congress. The public also feels that career politicians in Washington
are out of touch with the people. Continued Congress-bashing by the media
and members themselves serves only to buttress public cynicism about Congress.
4. The Special Politics of Campaign Finance,
Frank J. Sorauf
Public distrust of politicians shapes the politics of campaign finance
reform. While the public demands change, members of Congress view reform
as a threat to their reelection. Only a fundamental shift in the political
environment can bring about the reforms the public wants.
5. The
Congress (Supplementary Material)
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to Chapter 13 E-notes
Chief Justice Richard
Barajas
Advanced Placement U.S. Government and Politics
Cathedral High School, El Paso, Texas
Last updated: April 2002