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|a Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873
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|a We examine the politics of the "Salary Grab" of 1873, legislation that increased congressional salaries retroactively by 50 percent. A group of New England and Midwestern elites opposed the Salary Grab, along with congressional franking and patronage-based civil service appointments, as part of reform effort to reshape "who should govern Congress." Our analyses of congressional voting confirm the existence of this non-party elite coalition. While these elites lost many legislative battles in the short-run, their efforts kept reform on the legislative agenda throughout the late-nineteenth century and ultimately set the stage for the Progressive movement in the early-twentieth century
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Alston, Lee J. |
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We examine the politics of the "Salary Grab" of 1873, legislation that increased congressional salaries retroactively by 50 percent. A group of New England and Midwestern elites opposed the Salary Grab, along with congressional franking and patronage-based civil service appointments, as part of reform effort to reshape "who should govern Congress." Our analyses of congressional voting confirm the existence of this non-party elite coalition. While these elites lost many legislative battles in the short-run, their efforts kept reform on the legislative agenda throughout the late-nineteenth century and ultimately set the stage for the Progressive movement in the early-twentieth century |
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Alston, Lee J. aut, Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 Lee J. Alston, Jeffery A. Jenkins, Tomas Nonnenmacher, Cambridge, Mass National Bureau of Economic Research December 2005, 1 Online-Ressource, Text txt rdacontent, Computermedien c rdamedia, Online-Ressource cr rdacarrier, NBER working paper series no. w11908, Open Access Controlled Vocabulary for Access Rights http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 unrestricted online access, We examine the politics of the "Salary Grab" of 1873, legislation that increased congressional salaries retroactively by 50 percent. A group of New England and Midwestern elites opposed the Salary Grab, along with congressional franking and patronage-based civil service appointments, as part of reform effort to reshape "who should govern Congress." Our analyses of congressional voting confirm the existence of this non-party elite coalition. While these elites lost many legislative battles in the short-run, their efforts kept reform on the legislative agenda throughout the late-nineteenth century and ultimately set the stage for the Progressive movement in the early-twentieth century, Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers., Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers, Mode of access: World Wide Web., System requirements: Adobe [Acrobat] Reader required for PDF files., Jenkins, Jeffery A. oth, Nonnenmacher, Tomas oth, National Bureau of Economic Research oth, http://www.nber.org/papers/w11908 X:NBER Verlag kostenfrei, http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w11908 X:NBER Verlag kostenfrei, http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w11908 DE-14, DE-14 2020-03-13T12:37:25Z, http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w11908 LFER, http://www.nber.org/papers/w11908 LFER, LFER 2020-12-12T21:55:13Z |
spellingShingle |
Alston, Lee J., Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873, We examine the politics of the "Salary Grab" of 1873, legislation that increased congressional salaries retroactively by 50 percent. A group of New England and Midwestern elites opposed the Salary Grab, along with congressional franking and patronage-based civil service appointments, as part of reform effort to reshape "who should govern Congress." Our analyses of congressional voting confirm the existence of this non-party elite coalition. While these elites lost many legislative battles in the short-run, their efforts kept reform on the legislative agenda throughout the late-nineteenth century and ultimately set the stage for the Progressive movement in the early-twentieth century |
title |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 |
title_auth |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 |
title_full |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 Lee J. Alston, Jeffery A. Jenkins, Tomas Nonnenmacher |
title_fullStr |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 Lee J. Alston, Jeffery A. Jenkins, Tomas Nonnenmacher |
title_full_unstemmed |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 Lee J. Alston, Jeffery A. Jenkins, Tomas Nonnenmacher |
title_short |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 |
title_sort |
who should govern congress access to power and the salary grab of 1873 |
title_unstemmed |
Who Should Govern Congress? Access to Power and the Salary Grab of 1873 |
url |
http://www.nber.org/papers/w11908, http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w11908 |