Why Nothing Works: Who Killed Progress and How to Get It Back by Marc Dunkelman is one of the more interesting books on politics that I have read this year. It is thought-provoking and can help explain the problem in getting things done in the US. It may not solve the problem, but it offers a plausible framework.
The progressive movement, now well over 100 years old, is driven by conflicting philosophies about the role of government. These two approaches, Hamiltonian and Jeffersonian, represent very different views on how government should be used to solve problems. The Hamiltonian approach is a top-down, big-government approach that seeks to offset large private-power and control projects through experts. The Jeffersonian approach to government looks at large institutions and power as corrupting. The power should be dispersed and controlled by the people, not by experts or large institutions.
How can you get something done if top-down control by Hamiltonians is viewed with suspicion by the Jeffersonians? You may not be able to have ot both ways, and vacillating between the two will lead to inaction and program failure. The train to nowhere in California is all about the Big project, Hamiltonian government micromanaged by Jeffersonian rules and regulations to get local input.
No one seems to want either extreme, but the middle ground leads to an environment where Nothing works.



