Transatlantic Majoritarianism
How Murder, Migration, and Modernity Transformed Nineteenth-Century Legislatures
Lauren C. Bell
In 1890, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Thomas Brackett Reed used the authority his position afforded to him to permanently hobble legislative minorities in the House and to usher in the practice of simple majority rule. Legislative scholars have long lauded Reed as a transformational leader, whose singular actions established majoritarianism as standard in democratic legislatures. But despite the credit given to Reed, his actions were not entirely of his own invention; Reed was deeply influenced by the actions of Speaker of the British House of Commons Henry Bouverie William Brand, who in 1881 implemented the first closure of debate in the Commons in response to extreme, obstructive behavior by Irish members of Parliament. This book explores the questions of why and how two national legislatures located on two different continents and established hundreds of years apart were forced to respond to obstructive behavior within the same decade. Relying on archival evidence from both the U.S. and the U.K., Transatlantic Majoritarianism: How Murder, Migration, and Modernity Transformed Nineteenth-Century Legislatures reveals a transatlantic network of legislators, journalists, technocrats, and terrorists, whose intersecting milieux in the late nineteenth century radically transformed national legislatures in both the U.S. and the U.K.
Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open intiative.
About the Author
Lauren C. Bell is the James L. Miller Professor of Political Science at Randolph-Macon College (Ashland, Virginia). The author, co-author, or co-editor of numerous books and peer-reviewed articles, her scholarship focuses on government institutions, especially the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Congress. Her recent publications have explored legislative obstruction in comparative context, the effect of federal prosecutor demographics on the use of the death penalty, and on the long-running concert series held at the U.S. Supreme Court between 1984 and 2020. Dr. Bell previously served as an American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow on the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee and as a U.S. Supreme Court fellow at the U.S. Sentencing Commission.
Details
Published: December 2025
Formats
Hardback
ISBN: 978-1-63804-198-6
eBook
ISBN: 978-1-63804-199-3
Subjects
HistoryIrish Studies
Political Science
Series
International Nineteenth Century Studies Association Book Series