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The power of
Congress to regulate interstate and foreign commerce-the "commerce
clause" of the Constitution--is at the very core of Congress's
role and responsibility in the American political system.
It is, thus, not surprising that the House Energy and
Commerce Committee became one of the first standing committees
created in Congress in 1795. It stands today as the oldest
continuous standing committee in the House and as a committee
which is at the crossroads of almost every significant
policy area that Congress considers, from the economy
and health care to telecommunication, transportation,
energy and the environment.
Over 200 years,
the committee has changed frequently, in its name, its
powers and its jurisdictions. It has been known variously
as the Committee on Commerce and Manufactures, the Committee
on Commerce, the Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce, the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and coming
almost full circle, once again the Committee on Commerce
and the Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Its powers
have waxed and waned, along with its prestige. It frequently
has been subject to attack from reformers trying to curtail
its power, remove aspects of its jurisdiction, spread
some of its considerable goodies to other panels and
other lawmakers. (I confess that I have made such recommendations
from time to time myself.) But just as it started out
as a committee at the core of Congress's power, it remains
so today--as powerful, wide-ranging and prestigious as
any panel in either house of Congress. And along the
way, its legacy includes some of the most far-reaching
laws across the entire range of policy areas in the history
of the country.To think about
the House Energy and Commerce Committee means to think
about the origins of policy on public health, including
the creation and expansion of the Public Health Service
and the National Institutes of Health, and more recently,
the expansion and enhancement of health care to the needy
and disadvantaged through Medicaid, and the establishment
of a modern, wide-ranging health research program. (Now,
of course, it also means finding ways to curtail the
programs the committee earlier had built.)
The Energy
and Commerce Committee also is linked directly to the
creation of a comprehensive regulatory apparatus to handle
transportation, from railroads to shipping, trucking
and aviation, from the Interstate Commerce Commission
in the 1880s to the Civil Aeronautics Board in the 1930s
to the FAA in the 1950s and on through the deregulation
of transportation in the 1970s. The committee shaped
the Communications Act of 1934, and telecommunications
policy through the landmark reform bill of 1996; shaped
the major securities act in the early 1930s and worked
on comprehensive securities reform in the 1990s in a
vastly different global economic and technological environment;
and crafted the major legislation in the twentieth century
on energy, the environment (including the Clean Air Act),
consumer protection and, from the early 1960s on, focused
on the health hazards of tobacco. It is hard to find
an area in citizens' lives that has not been affected
by the actions of this important panel.
Rayburn
Era
As with every
committee, Energy and Commerce's activism and output
have ebbed and flowed over two hundred years, influenced
by the times and the nature of committee and House leadership.
There have been two prime areas of committee influence
and power--what we could call the Samuel Rayburn era
and the John Dingell era. If other chairmen were notable
for their longevity and influence, including in modern
times Oren Harris and Harley Staggers, no chairs have
had the impact on the nation's policy or the imprint
on the House of Sam Rayburn and John Dingell. By the
force of their personalities, the power of their ideas
and the passion behind their commitments to their points
of view, they both influenced the government's structure
and direction, and national policies in ways few legislators
have matched. Rayburn chaired the committee from 1931
through 1936--including, of course, the dramatic period
during Franklin D. Roosevelt's first term that led to
the creation of the modern regulatory state. FDR was
the driving force, but Rayburn's own populist commitment
made a major difference, and turned the committee from
a relatively minor one during the decade before his chairmanship
into a forum for policy revolution. His activist chairmanship
led to his election as Speaker of thc House.
Dingell
Era
Dingell took
the committee's reins with the ascendancy of another
powerful and consequential president, but of the opposite
party and with a very different world view--Ronald Reagan.
Also in contrast with Rayburn, the climate in the House
was more democratized and decentralized and less oriented
to committee authority. Nevertheless, Dingell managed,
through the Reagan years and beyond, to become one of
the most powerful committee chairs in the history of
the House, even as the power on the committee devolved
to such active subcommittee chairs as Henry Waxman, Jim
Florio, Phil Sharp, and later, Ed Markey and A1 Swift,
and even though he did not always see eye to eye with
his subcommittee colleagues.
Force
of personality, intellect, drive and savvy, not to mention
the ability to inject fear in one's colleagues and adversaries,
all combine to make leaders powerful. Dingell also was
fiercely protective of the committee's reputation and
jurisdiction, and expansive, to say the least, in his
territorial objectives. He "claims jurisdiction over anything that moves, burns
or is sold," the National Journal noted with some understatement
a few years ago. As Dingell's reputation grew, so did
the attractiveness of the committee; in recent years,
it has surpassed that of any other House panel with the
possible exceptions of Ways and Means and Appropriations.
A New House
The House itself
was dramatically transformed by the 1994 elections, bringing
in the first Republican majority in forty years. That
meant a new chairman of the committee, Tom Bliley of
Virginia, but it also meant a transformation of the committee
itself. The name was changed, from Committee on Energy
and Commerce to Committee on Commerce. There were some
jurisdictional changes, as the committee gave up jurisdiction
over railroads and inland waterways. Tom Bliley's personal
style was dramatically different from his predecessor's,
but Bliley's personal relationship with John Dingell
was a strong one, and the committee managed to navigate
through a highly partisan era in the House while still
managing frequently to build legislative accomplishments
in a bipartisan fashion, including the landmark Telecommunications
Act of 1996, and sweeping securities reform in the same
Congress. Those bills, among others, underscored the
importance, sweep and power of the committee across political
eras. After 1995, the appeal of the committee to the
members of the House was apparent in the steady drive
to expand its size to accommodate demand. In 1992, the
committee had 43 members. By 2000, it was up to S3 members.
Yet another
era began in 2001, with Tom Bliley's retirement and the
ascendance to the committee's chairmanship of Billy Tauzin
of Louisiana. Hard-charging, opinionated and energetic,
Tauzin suggested a return to the high profile style of
leadership of the Dingell era. While the House continued
to be ruled by Republicans in the 107th Congress, change,
not continuity, was the watchword on the committee. The
committee grew to 57 members. The name changed again--back
to Energy and Commerce--as jurisdiction shifted again.
As the House Republicans moved to create a powerful new
Financial Services Committee, Commerce gave to it jurisdiction
over securities regulation. As a consequence, the subcommittees
were reorganized. Among other things, what had been Finance
and Hazardous Materials became Environment and Hazardous
Materials, when jurisdiction over the environment was
shifted from the health subcommittee. Trade and consumer
protection moved to a new subcommittee on Commerce, Trade
and Consumer Protection; it had previously been with
telecommunications, which became Telecommunications and
the Internet.
Any suggestion
that the loss of jurisdiction would diminish the impact
of the committee was allayed early on in the 107th Congress.
The energy crisis in California, followed by the Enron
and Arthur Andersen debacles, moved the Energy and Commerce
Committee to center stage, familiar ground for it whether
under Democrats or Republicans.
This history
is an extension of remarks presented by Dr. Norman
Ornstein on the occasion of the Society's dinner honoring
the House Commerce Committee in 1995. Dr. Ornstein
is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute |