Abstract
This chapter explores how members of Congress strategize to win the battle over U.S. foreign policy. While traditional scholarship focuses on establishment party leaders and majority rule, we argue that the study of factions flows naturally from theories of democratic representation. Exploration of the role of sub-groups within parties as agents of change helps overcome some systemic biases in the political science scholarship, as well as in popular culture, regarding the role of factions.
This nation is never beyond remedy, it is never beyond hope, it is never too broken to fix. We will be here, and we are going to rock the world.
—Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (2018)
You cannot compound a successful government out of antagonisms.
—Woodrow Wilson (1908)
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Homan, P., Lantis, J.S. (2020). Introduction: Congress, Factions, and the Battle for U.S. Foreign Policy. In: The Battle for U.S. Foreign Policy. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-30171-2_1
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