By the end of the war, many legislators had concluded that the only way to recapture their lost stature was to reform the Congress. A key leader of the reform movement was the veteran
Wisconsin senator Robert M. La Follette Jr., scion of Wisconsin's famous political dynasty. In 1945, he and
Oklahoma representative
A. S. "Mike" Monroney co-chaired a joint committee of Congress to consider what might be done to make the body more efficient and effective. The following year, the committee recommended sweeping reforms, and the committee's co-chairs incorporated many of those reforms into a reorganization measure.
Provisions The key provisions of the Act proposed streamlining Congress's cumbersome committee system by reducing the number of
standing committees and carefully defining their jurisdictions; upgrading staff support for legislators; strengthening
congressional oversight of executive agencies; and establishing an elaborate procedure to put congressional spending and taxation policies on a more rational basis. The bill also required
lobbyists to register with Congress and to file periodic reports of their activities. Under the Act the Committees on
Public Buildings and Grounds (1837–1946),
Rivers and Harbors (1883–1946),
Roads (1913–46), and the
Flood Control (1916–46) were combined to form the
Committee on Public Works. Its jurisdiction from the beginning of the 80th Congress (1947–48) through the 90th Congress (1967–68) remained unchanged. The Act also prohibited the practice of the Executive Branch detailing staff to committees for policy development. FDR had detailed several Executive Branch staff to key committees that were working on his legislative agenda. Congressional backlash to this tactic is one of the reasons the Act was passed. ==Results==