James G. D'Angelo(@JamesGDAngelo) 's Twitter Profileg
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

linkhttps://congressionalresearch.org/Citations.html calendar_today05-02-2014 23:56:13

43,0K Tweets

7,0K Followers

2,8K Following

James G. D'Angelo(@JamesGDAngelo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Some call Article 1, Section 5, Clause 3 of the Constitution 'The Journal Clause.'

The framers did not have a name for it.

But, if you follow the Constitutional Convention, the ratification debates, and later comments by Madison and Hamilton, that these 56 words should…

Some call Article 1, Section 5, Clause 3 of the Constitution 'The Journal Clause.' The framers did not have a name for it. But, if you follow the Constitutional Convention, the ratification debates, and later comments by Madison and Hamilton, that these 56 words should…
account_circle
Matthew Yglesias(@mattyglesias) 's Twitter Profile Photo

IMO transparency is one of the most overrated ideas in governance.

Love this suggestion of anonymous congressional votes.

slowboring.com/p/the-take-bak…

account_circle
The Economist(@TheEconomist) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The “secret congress” theory holds that a successful compromise can happen as long as no one makes a fuss over it.

Here we (quietly) applaud the rather good tax deal that the House of Representatives passed by an overwhelming margin econ.st/3OD1AqE 👇

account_circle
Nicholas Gruen(@NGruen1) 's Twitter Profile Photo

James G. D'Angelo Jennifer Senior

Which is why you'd give a standing citizen assembly the right to compel a secret ballot on any public vote or either chamber with which it disagreed.

An idea of mine that Rory Stewart has picked up nicholasgruen.substack.com/i/138958537/ro…

account_circle
James G. D'Angelo(@JamesGDAngelo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Nice to see folks catching up to novelty of the Framers in 1787 and article 1 of the Constitution which endorses secrecy - 'Each House shall keep a journal of its proceedings, and from time to time publish the same, excepting such parts as may in their judgment require secrecy.'

account_circle
Chris D(@airdoo01) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“The best way to drain the swamp and reverse the rise in inequality is to simply ask the lobbyists to step back into the lobby and then gently close the doors.” Absolutely worth reading!

account_circle
James G. D'Angelo(@JamesGDAngelo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ashley Schapitl I expect now that TurboTax and their minions lose power, and lobby less, we will even see greater simplification of our tax laws.

account_circle
@Alex_Armlovich(@aarmlovi) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Based on the Secret Congress theory, any proposal boosted by the President's 'bully pulpit' risks instant knee-jerk partisan poisoning

To avoid that, I'm actually relieved that Biden is not going to look directly into the camera & say 'I am exactly the correct kind of YIMBY'

account_circle
Gabe Fleisher(@WakeUp2Politics) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Huh, it turns out that the Americans with Disabilities Act — one of the most consequential pieces of modern legislation — was the work of “Secret Congress”

cc: Matthew Yglesias Simon Bazelon

Huh, it turns out that the Americans with Disabilities Act — one of the most consequential pieces of modern legislation — was the work of “Secret Congress” cc: @mattyglesias @simon_bazelon
account_circle