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127 Yale L. J. 880 (2017-2018)
How Long Is History's Shadow

handle is hein.journals/ylr127 and id is 924 raw text is: ANITA S. KRISHNAKUMAR
How Long Is History's Shadow?
Congress's Constitution: Legislative Authority and the Separation
of Powers
BY JOSH CHAFETZ
YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2017
A B S T R A C T. In Congress's Constitution, Josh Chafetz takes issue with those who have questioned
the value of Congress in recent years. He argues that Congress's critics focus too heavily on its
legislative function and ignore several important nonlegislative powers that enable Congress to ex-
ert significant authority vis-a-vis the other branches. Chafetz engages in close historical examina-
tion of these nonlegislative powers and notes that in some cases, Congress has ceased exercising
them as robustly as it once did, while in others it has unwittingly ceded them to another branch.
Congress's Constitution urges Congress to reassert several of its ceded powers more aggressively go-
ing forward, in order to recapture some of the authority and influence it has lost over time.
While admiring Chafetz's project- and sharing in his nostalgia for some of Congress's lost
powers -this Review questions Congress's ability and inclination to rehabilitate its underused
powers in the manner Chafetz advocates. It argues, first, that at least some of the powers Chafetz
seeks to revive read like ancient history -the record of an era of legislative governance that has
long since passed and that subsequent political and legal events have transformed-perhaps irre-
versibly. Second, it notes that Chafetz may be underestimating some important dynamics, such as
partisanship, that could make Congress itself less likely to want to exercise its powers, and the public
unlikely to accept Congress's attempts to aggressively exercise powers that have lain dormant for
decades. More fundamentally, the Review suggests that the present-day Congress may be too
shortsighted to look past what it wants in the moment in order to take steps that will benefit it
as an institution. Moreover, Congress may not care as much about preserving its own traditions
and history as Chafetz does.
In the end, the Review therefore submits that while reinvigorating Congress's underappreci-
ated powers is a good idea in theory, in practice it may prove more challenging than Chafetz rec-
ognizes.

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