Category Admin

Programming Note

The LLB returns to regular posting August 24th on a twice-weekly schedule. Looking forward to it!

Tall Cotton

LLB is now officially a high class blawg. We traded in our wordpress.com domain name for a new one that’s all ours: www.legislativelawbulletin.com. Also, you may contact your erstwhile editor at a new e-mail address: editor -at- legislativelawbulletin.com. We now waiting for an offer from Google.

Back from a Long Recess

I’m back after a tiring but somewhat exciting legislative session in Texas and the resulting aftermath. It is my hope to begin posting at least two times a week, if not more. I will be counting on Kevin and Zac to hold me to this schedule even tho both of them should be studying and not reading blawgs.

Programming Note

Light blogging thru the holidays. Enjoy yourselves!

Recess

Light posting this week because of other commitments, but I’m working on a post for week’s end. Stay tuned.

Call to Order

I decided to start this blawg as my own “ice-axe to break the frozen sea within [me].” I have been toying with the idea of starting this blawg for some time, but hesitated each time because I thought that, quite possibly, that I really didn’t have much to say after all. I’ve decided that the only way to find out is to simply begin.

You might well ask “what is ‘legislative law?’” I use “legislative law” to refer to several related concepts. First, it refers to the “discipline [formulated by Georgetown Law Prof. Chai Feldblum] of combining knowledge of political realities with a thorough understanding of legal issues — to [let the lawyer] develop legislation that effectively meets one’s goals and still has a realistic chance of passage, or to stop or modify legislation that is antithetical to one’s goals.” It also refers to that part of the law concerned with legislative bodies (including their election and composition) and the legislative process. It also refers to that part of the law concerned with working with the product of legislative bodies, popularly known as statutory construction. It isn’t primarily about lobbying or lobbyists, although it does address the legal regulation of those who lobby Federal, state, and local legislative bodies.

A legislative lawyer is a lawyer that straddles “the vast difference[s] between law in the books and law in action.” See Arthur T. Vanderbilt, Forward to Vol. 1, 1 Tex. L. & Legis. 1 (1947).

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