The Beltway Bible: A Totally Serious A-Z Guide To Our No-Good, Corrupt, Incompetent, Terrible, Depressing, and Sometimes Hilarious Government
By (Author) Eliot Nelson
St Martin's Press
St Martin's Press
27th September 2016
United States
General
Non Fiction
Political ideologies and movements
Public opinion and polls
Humour
320.9730207
432
Width 135mm, Height 208mm
300g
How is legislation crafted How so you lose an election What do "bundler," "quorum call" and "omnibus" mean Why do some of the White House's most important meetings occur at an outpost of Caribou Coffee Why should you want to have a Jumbo Slice at 3:00 AM on any given early morning, if you are an ambitious staffer on The Hill. What, exactly, is a "skintern" Eliot Nelson, one of Washington's funniest and most admired young journalists, knows how the sausage factory works and his new book, The Beltway Bible, is every American's must-have owner's manual to the high and low points of our esteemed government. Arranged from A-Z, The Beltway Bible will look at politics and government from an insider's perch breaking the bureaucracy into easily-digested entries on fundamental subjects like how legislation is formed, the scope of the president's power and an overview of primary federal agencies. Eliot also looks at those less-well-known power structures in D.C. that trade in buffoonery and shenanigans: the internal pecking order of White House aides, the high school cafeteria power struggles inside the president's cabinet and the petty congressional arguments over how highway on-ramps are named. The Beltway Bible makes our complex government accessible in a way that will please everyone from Jon Stewart to John Doe. Eliot Nelson's The Beltway Bible is tailor-made for Election 2016.
ELIOT NELSON Eliot Nelson is a political reporter and editor at The Huffington Post's Washington, D.C. bureau where he covers campaigns, Congress, and the intersection of culture and politics. He is the author of HuffPost Hill, a daily humorous political tip sheet with over 250,000 subscribers both inside and outside the Beltway. Born and raised in New York City, he lives in Washington, D.C.