Some twenty years ago, Richard F. Fenno, Jr. published The Senate Through the Looking Glass a particularly illuminating and trenchant assessment of the state of the Senate. Listening to senators debate whether to allow television cameras into the chamber, Fenno concluded that the Senate was still capable of thoughtful deliberation and consensual decision-making. In this article, I take a Fenno-inspired peek through the looking glass at the contemporary Senate, using a recent parliamentary dispute to probe senators views about their institution. The view is unusually dark. Two decades after Fennos assessment, rising partisanship has made the Senate nearly ungovernableleaving a chamber that struggles to fulfill its most basic constitutional duties.
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