Page:Congressional Government.djvu/362

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its power convenient and honest, 312.
Consultation between President and Senate, not real, 232 et seq.; means of, between President and Senate, 234.
Contingent Fund of Treasury Dept., fraudulent use of, 178.
Convention, Constitutional, of 1787, 268, 284, 307, 309.
Convention, national nominating, real functions of a, 245 et seq.; minority representation in composition of a, 246; conditions surrounding choice of a candidate by a, 250, 251; does not pick from Congress, 251, 252.
Cooley, Judge, on balance between state and federal govts., 17, 18; on checks upon federal encroachment, 33, 34; on judicial control of the Executive, 35; on the originality of the Constitution, 55, 56; incompleteness of constitutional view of, 56, 57.
“Courtesy” of the Senate, 238.
Criticism, necessity for a new, of constitutional methods, 53 et seq.; former methods of constitutional, 57; Congress central object of constitutional, 57; of legislation by Senate, 219.
Cromwell, Oliver, 207, 208.
Cushman, Samuel, 89.


Dale, Mr., on indifference of public opinion in U.S., 331.
Debate, time for, and conditions of, in House, 75 et seq.; importance of, 78; on Ways and Means and Appropriations, 78; absence of instinct of, in House, 79; relegated to Standing Committees, 81, 82; in Standing Committees, 81; value of, in Committees, 82; kind of, necessary, 85; physical limitations of, in House, 86 et seq.; in early Houses, 89, 90; uninteresting and uninstructive character of, in Congress, 95, 96, 101, 134, 185, 298; parliamentary, centres about Ministry, 95; necessity for, under responsible Cabinet govt., 119; in French Assembly, 125 et seq.; of appropriation bills, 154, 155, 183, 184; of all financial questions by Congress, 183; in Senate, 211, 216 et seq.; in Congress, directed at random, 298; chief use of public, in representative bodies, 299 et seq.; of administration, cannot be too much of, in Congress, 304.
Deficiency Bills, 159.
Democracy, limited in U.S. by Senate, 226.
Denmark, treaty with, in regard to St. Thomas, in Senate, 50, 51.
Departments, communications of, with Appropriation Committees concerning estimates, 160-164; present methods of book-keeping in the, 163; heads of, make interest with Appropriation Committees, 163; Senate’s share in control of the, 231; and Congress, defective means of coöperation between, 270, 271; demoralizing relations of, with Congress, 277, 278; exactions of Congress upon, 278, 279; objects of suspicion because of their privacy, 299, 300.


Eaton, D. B., on civil service reform in Great Britain, 285.
Education, federal aid to, 29.
Election, Senate shielded by the method of its, 224; of President, real method of, 243 et seq.; virtual, by nominating conventions, 245.
Electors, presidential, balanced against people, 40; agents of nominating conventions, 245, 250; history of action of, 246, 247, 250.
Ellsworth, Oliver, on veto power, 52.
Embargo, the, 21.
English Constitution, likeness between the, and that of U.S., 7, 307 et seq.; character of, when Constitution of U.S. was formed, 307, 308, 310, 311.
Estimates, in House of Commons, 137; preparation of the federal, 148, 149; federal, go to Committee on Appropriations, 149; communications and conferences between Appropriation Committees and the departments concerning, 160-164; thoroughness of later, 163.
Exchequer, Chancellor of, preparation and submission to Commons of budget by, 140-142; represented by House Committee of Ways and Means, 170; financial policy of, compared with policy of House Committee of Ways and Means, 171-175.
Executive, 242-293; relations of,