Introduction
 1. The Johnson Years (1965–1968): A Remarkable Time to Begin in Congress
 Passing Medicare
 The Other War in Vietnam
 Thanksgiving 1966
 Luncheon at the White House
 Visit to the CIA
 President Johnson Off the Record
 Urban Riots
 The Regular Order
 The U.S. Role in the World
 Senate Hearings on the Vietnam War
 Civil Disorder after Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
 The Assassination of Robert Kennedy
 2. The Nixon Years (1969–1974): Accomplishments Amid Turmoil
 Christmas at the Nixon White House
 Changing the House Seniority System
 Meeting with Student Protesters
 Reducing the Voting Age
 Setting up our System of Government
 Reports on Trip to War Zone
 The Pentagon Papers
 Nixon's Trip to China
 Evaluation of the Apollo Program
 Inauguration 1973
 The Costs of the Vietnam War
 The Vice President's Resignation
 The House Judiciary Committee and Impeachment
 After Watergate
 3. The Ford Years (1974–1976): A Needed Respite
 The Pardon
 As We Leave Vietnam
 The Middle Class
 The Women's Rights Movement
 Politicians
 Democracy and Capitalism
 Big Government
 Congress and Foreign Policy
 4. The Carter Years (1977–1980): Intra-party Discord
 Inauguration Day 1977
 Human Rights
 Reorganizing the Federal Bureaucracy
 The Panama Canal Treaty
 An Assessment of the Carter Administration
 The Congressional Budget Process
 A Good Word For America
 The Gasoline Shortage
 The Iranian Hostage Crisis
 Deregulation
 5. The Reagan Years (1981–1988): Letting the Democratic Process Work
 President Reagan Looks at Social Security
 Improving Intelligence Analysis
 The Week the Government Stopped
 Reflections on the 97th Congress
 The Military Balance
 Religion in Politics
 How a Member Decides
 The Appeal of Congress
 Our Constitutional Heritage
 Issues of the Future
 Covert Actions in a Democratic Society
 The Reagan-Gorbachev Summit
 The Budget Legacy of the Reagan Years
 The Quiet Crisis
 6. The George H. W. Bush Years (1989–1992): A New World Order
 SDI reassessment
 House Ethics Reform
 Supply-side Economics
 National Spending Priorities
 Lessons of the Great Society
 The United States Flag and the Constitution
 The Balanced Budget Amendment
 The President's Arms Control Speech
 Congressional Perks
 The Confirmation Process
 Iraq and the Persian Gulf War One Year Later
 7. The Clinton Years (1993–2000): Opportunity Lost
 Questions About Congress
 Reinventing Government
 Public Cynicism
 The Term Limit Movement and Congressional Change
 The Contract with America
 A Sensible Role for Government
 The Budget Battle
 Civility in Congress
 The Budget Surplus
 The Starr Report and the Congressional Response
 The Work of Congress
 The Record of the 105th Congress
 Why Voting Matters
 8. The George W. Bush Years (2001–2008): A Timid Congress
 Why the President Needs the Help of Congress to Make Foreign Policy
 The Merits of Citizen Engagement
 Why Congress Needs to Assert Itself
 Oversight At Last
 We Urgently Need Redistricting Reform
 Our Leaders Must Find a Balance on Iraq
 What Politics Should Be About
 The Ten Commandments of Citizenship
 9. The Obama Years (2009–2014): Continuing Struggles
 Is Congress Up To The Task Before It?
 Polarization Will Not Disappear Quickly
 Here's An Idea For Congress: Try Democracy
 In Congress, Going Big Isn't Always the Answer
 It's Not Just Congress: Citizens Also Have Room to Improve
 The Invisible Lawmakers
 The Justices and the Scramble for Cash
 Now It's Time to Focus on the Economy
 The Summer of Our Discontent
 10. Some Concluding Thoughts