3.2: Chapter 21- Congressional Roles
- Page ID
- 73462
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Representation
Constituent Service
Oversight
A final important congressional role is performing executive-agency oversight. Congress is interested to see how programs and regulations are actually working and what impacts federal laws have once they go into effect. So, standing committees and their subcommittees hold hearings to inquire into the operations of those executive agencies. Congressmen sometimes have an interest in serving the American public by exposing waste, fraud, and abuse in the executive branch. Often, those agencies’ heads are called to testify before a committee or subcommittee, and experts from the General Accounting Office—which is the investigative arm of Congress—testify about their investigations into a particular agency.
It is important to understand the perilous state of congressional oversight. Presidents from both parties as well as the intelligence agencies have resisted Congress’ efforts to get the information it needs. With respect to presidents and other executive officials, there is a clear tension between congressional oversight and what is known as executive privilege. Although executive privilege is never explicitly mentioned in the constitution, presidents have long held that they are entitled to withhold from Congress certain executive branch documents and the transcripts of deliberations within executive agencies. They also say that executive privilege allows them to defy congressional subpoenas to testify before oversight committees. We’ll talk more about executive privilege when we get to the presidency section of the text.
References
- Quoted in Robert G. Kaiser, Act of Congress. How America’s Essential Institution Works, and How It Doesn’t. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2013. Page xii.
- Drew Desilver, “A Productivity Scorecard for the 115thCongress: More Laws Than Before, But Not More Substance,” Pew Research Center. January 25, 2019.
- Sarah J. Eckman, Constituent Services: Overview and Resources. Congressional Research Service. January 5, 2017. Page 1.