

Constitution and Senate voting rules for enabling situations of legislative gridlock.


Law professors such as Sanford Levinson and Adrian Vermeule, as well as political commentators such as Matthew Yglesias and Debbie Parks, have criticized the U.S. Political Gridlock by author Ned Witting identifies many of the causes of gridlock in the United States and outlines ways to get government working again. Gridlock may also occur within the Senate, when no party has a filibuster-proof majority. In United States politics, gridlock frequently refers to occasions when the House of Representatives and the Senate are controlled by different parties, or by a different party than the party of the president. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee about the gridlock caused by the separation of powers and checks and balances of the U.S. Of course, we have also never had a shortage of people who “revile one in the manner of drunkards,” which makes one wonder how it is that debacchate has failed to catch on.U.S. The success of this word, in both of its senses, would appear to be attributable to its being in the right place at the right time: We have no shortage of either vehicles or political initiatives that are slow-moving. 1981Īlthough gridlock still has considerable currency in describing traffic, it has now become more commonly associated with political congestion. William Steif, Lead Daily Call (Lead, SD), 4 Sept. What the 1978 amendments actually did were to create a kind of gridlock the billboard industry wants. ”I always mention satellites and land lines and remotes like I know what I’m talking about … But really it’s like economics-when I hear about it my mind goes into gridlock.” Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, NY), 13 Nov.

One thing that is striking about gridlock is that, in addition to becoming part of our general language, the word almost immediately took on a figurative sense, “a situation resembling gridlock (as in congestion or lack of movement).”īut the Environmental Protection Agency’s policies make it impossible to burn anything else, he said - a “governmental grid-lock” that prevents any action. Spillback may not have caught on, but gridlock was an instant hit, and the word went from relative obscurity (appearing mainly in municipal planning reports) to being the descriptor of choice for people explaining why they were late. Increasing Commuting by Transit and Ridesharing, 1980 The fears arising from the recent transit strike in New York City of “Gridlock,” “Spillback” and dangerously unhealthy carbon monoxide levels underscore our concern about the inescapable relationship of mass transit, pollution and congestion. The initial sense of this word (which is still very much in use) was “a traffic jam in which a grid of intersecting streets is so completely congested that no vehicular movement is possible.” Although it may have existed before the 1980s, it was thrust into the public consciousness following the transit strike of New York City in 1980, when the subway and bus workers of that city walked off their jobs for over a week. Gridlock entered our language quite recently our earliest written evidence for this word comes from 1980 (although there have been reports that it existed as part of the jargon of urban planners for some time prior to this). Our earliest written evidence for 'gridlock' comes from 1980-though the word may have existed before then, it's still surprisingly new.
