@inbook{10.2307/j.ctt14bt2sj.9, ISBN = {9781566393256}, URL = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt14bt2sj.9}, abstract = {Beginning in the earliest days of Taft-Hartley, evidence had been accumulating that the separation of powers between the Board and the general counsel was not working. From the hostile negotiations over the delegation agreement in 1947, the dispute over the scope of the noncommunist affidavit provision, and Denham’s role in the ITU episode, to the ongoing power struggle over who had the authority to determine the NLRB’s jurisdiction, the clashing of two powerful egos—Herzog and Denham—often obscured, or was used to obscure, the fundamental structural defects in the two-headed agency. It was easy to be distracted from deeper}, author = {JAMES A. GROSS}, booktitle = {Broken Promise: The Subversion Of U.S. Labor Relations}, pages = {58--71}, publisher = {Temple University Press}, title = {Taft-Hartley Was Here to Stay}, year = {1995} }