cover image The Waxman Report: How Congress Really Works

The Waxman Report: How Congress Really Works

Henry Waxman, with Joshua Green. . Hachette/Twelve, $24.99 (235pp) ISBN 978-0-446-51925-0

After 35 years in the House of Representatives, Waxman, the mustached congressman from California, offers a very readable insider’s account of his 35 years in the House. The longtime governmental watchdog crusaded for AIDS awareness, the Clean Air Act and stronger tobacco regulations as chairman of the Health and Environment subcommittee. The book chronicles the strategies and horse trading necessary to enact these regulations, including coalition building, raising public awareness and remaining informed on the countless issues affecting his constituency. Waxman doesn’t romanticize his position, and admits that the qualities that have best served him have been “patience, a knack for finding allies... and the ability to persevere.” His conviction that government can better the lives of citizens is uplifting and strengthened by his record of implementing landmark legislation. The book frequently reads too much like a civics lesson to be fully engrossing, but the explanation of the workings of a widely misunderstood government body is a public service from a committed civil servant. (July)