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Congress Has A Rich History Of Legislating In Secrecy

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

Senate Republicans are still working on their version of a bill to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act or Obamacare. And they're doing it behind closed doors, something that has frustrated Democrats and Republicans.

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BRIAN SCHATZ: Why are they working on this bill in secret? And the answer is very simple. The bill stinks. They're ashamed of it.

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LISA MURKOWSKI: Yeah, I've got a problem with it. If I'm not going to see a bill before we have a vote on it, that's just not a good way to handle something that is as significant as and important as health care.

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MITCH MCCONNELL: Nobody's hiding the ball here. You're free to ask anybody anything.

MCEVERS: That was Democratic Senator Brian Schatz of Hawaii, Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Despite the criticism of drafting this bill in secret, the Senate once was a place where things were drafted in secret. I talked about this with Princeton University historian Julian Zelizer.

JULIAN ZELIZER: When the Senate first met, there was an assumption that they would be a closed body and that they would meet in secret. And we've had a battle really since the founding through today of the tradeoff between that secrecy that some people think is required for good governing and transparency and accountability which many people think is equally important for our democracy to work.

MCEVERS: Were people OK with the Senate being a closed body, though, in a certain way over periods of time?

ZELIZER: Well, we don't really have great - we have no popular opinion polls until the 1930s and '40s. And in the period we do have those - the 1950s and '60s, which is really the high point I think of a lot of this secrecy in the middle of the Cold War and when the committees in both the Senate and House were very strong and deliberated on their own - there wasn't a huge outcry against it. People certainly registered pretty high levels of trust in Congress certainly by the late '60s and early '70s.

MCEVERS: Could you give us an example of a major piece of legislation that was drafted during this time in secrecy without any public debate?

ZELIZER: Well, the Medicare legislation was passed in 1965. It's the first major health care program that we have. The heart of legislation was worked out in the House in the ways and means committee where the chairman, Wilbur Mills, a Democrat from Arkansas, basically took an administration proposal that had been the subject of hearings, took it behind closed doors and totally transformed the bill, turning it into what we have today. And even Lyndon Johnson didn't know exactly what was going on until one of his staffers who was in the room reported to him what the House had actually done to it. And the bill is considered really watershed legislation.

MCEVERS: And then what changed? I mean I would assume it was Watergate that brought more transparency to Congress.

ZELIZER: Yeah, I mean it starts a little earlier. It starts in 1966. That's when Congress passes the Freedom of Information Act, and that's already a sign that there's members of Congress who believe that openness is a virtue and that transparency is a virtue and that citizens need to know what's going on in Congress. And then it wasn't until Vietnam and Watergate that you have this big push by reformers in Congress and outside of Congress to open up the system. And by the early '80s, there is an expectation that only in certain circumstances should Congress govern this way. Otherwise we should know what's going on.

MCEVERS: When we're talking about bills being drafted behind closed doors and what's happening now, what's different today from the way it happened in the '50s and '60s?

ZELIZER: When you had these secret deliberations, both parties were in the room. So when in the House Wilbur Mills crafts Medicare, the leading Republican on the committee, John Byrnes of Wisconsin - he's there, too, and he's participating. I think what we're seeing in the Senate today is different not just because we're not used to this kind of secrecy, but it seems at least it's primarily being driven by the Republicans without Democratic input. So it's a little different on that front as well.

MCEVERS: Julian Zelizer, professor of American political history at Princeton University, thanks so much.

ZELIZER: Thanks for having me. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Kelly McEvers is a two-time Peabody Award-winning journalist and former host of NPR's flagship newsmagazine, All Things Considered. She spent much of her career as an international correspondent, reporting from Asia, the former Soviet Union, and the Middle East. She is the creator and host of the acclaimed Embedded podcast, a documentary show that goes to hard places to make sense of the news. She began her career as a newspaper reporter in Chicago.