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Joe Cannon and the Minority Party: Tyranny or Bipartisanship?
Author(s) -
KREHBIEL KEITH,
WISEMAN ALAN E.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
legislative studies quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.728
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1939-9162
pISSN - 0362-9805
DOI - 10.3162/036298005x201644
Subject(s) - legislature , political science , law , public administration
The minority party is rarely featured in empirical research on parties in legislatures, and recent theories of parties in legislatures are rarely neutral and balanced in their treatment of the minority and majority parties. This article makes a case for redressing this imbalance. We identified four characteristics of bipartisanship and evaluated their descriptive merits in a purposely hostile testing ground: during the rise and fall of Speaker Joseph G. Cannon, “the Tyrant from Illinois.” Drawing on century‐old recently discovered records now available in the National Archives, we found that Cannon was anything but a majority‐party tyrant during the important committee‐assignment phase of legislative organization. Our findings underscore the need for future, more explicitly theoretical research on parties ‐in‐legislatures.