Congress’ long year-end to-do list includes addressing the nation's borrowing authority and an annual defense authorization package. These priorities, and others, leave little, if any, room in the December agenda for consideration of election reform bills or the Build Back Better Act.
Policy decisions that prioritize the needs of businesses and the wealthy over average Americans are not unusual, writes Christopher Witko, professor of public policy and political science and associate director of the School of Public Policy in his new co-authored book, “Hijacking the Agenda: Economic Power and Political Influence.” Published by Russell Sage Foundation Press, the book is a multi-university collaborative project between Witko and three co-authors, Peter K. Enns, professor of government at Cornell University and executive director of the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, and Nathan J. Kelly and Jana Morgan, both professors of political science at the University of Tennessee.