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Chapter 9 Congress

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Each bill that survives committee must go through the Rules Committee. ... Any senator can kill a bill by withholding consent. Debate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 9 Congress


1
Chapter 9 Congress
2
Congress
  • Origins, Structure, and Membership
  • Bicameral Differences
  • Rules of Lawmaking How a Bill Becomes a Law
  • Budgeting and Oversight

3
Legislative Branch
  • English Legislative Heritage
  • Parliament
  • The Great Compromise
  • Bicameral Design
  • Apportionment
  • Congressional Districts
  • Political Equality
  • Gerrymandering

4
Constitutional Basis
  • Article I, Section 1 - All legislative powers
    vested in a Congress
  • Article I, Section 8 - Powers to
  • Article I, Section 9 - Be no section
  • Article I, Section 10 - Be no state section
  • Compromise in structure and representation

5
The Electoral Connection
  • Qualifications (25/7 and 30/9 - resident)
  • Factors contribute to the composition of
    Congress
  • who decides to run
  • the incumbency effect (95-98/83-85)
  • Terms and Sessions (Jan 3rd - 109th)
  • Term Limits

6
Differences between the House and the Senate
- filibusters/riders permitted
7
The First Gerrymander
8
Reapportionment of House Seats following the 1990
Census
9
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10
Sociological Representation?Moderate Growth
11
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12
The Electoral ConnectionIncumbent Winning
Percentages
13
Politico Styles
  • Trustee representation
  • trusted to use own judgement and conscience
  • social issues
  • Delegate representation
  • expected to vote constituents desires
  • economic - bread and butter issues
  • Domestic Policy Decisions
  • Foreign Policy Decisions
  • Constant battle to balance

14
What Exactly Do They Do?
  • Continuous Campaign
  • Pork Barrel Politicking
  • Constituent Case Work

15
Constituent Service
16
Internal Influence
  • Reciprocity - log rolling
  • Personal Courtesy - the honorable gentleman
    from, stigmas of personal attacks.
  • Specialization - committee expertise
  • Caucuses are groups of senators or
    representatives who share certain opinions,
    interests or social characteristics.
  • Democratic Study Group
  • Congressional Black Caucus
  • Hispanic Caucus
  • Caucus for Womens Issues

17
The Organization of Congress
  • Party Leadership
  • The Committee System
  • The Staff System

18
Party Leadership House
Congressional leadership is chosen every two
years at the beginning of each new congressional
session.
  • Minority Party
  • Minority leader
  • Minority whip
  • Steering and Policy Committee
  • Majority Party
  • Speaker of the House
  • Majority leader
  • Majority whip
  • Committee on Committees -Conference

19
House LeadershipMeans of Selection
20
Party Leadership Senate
  • Formal
  • President of the Senate
  • Vice president
  • Votes to break ties
  • President pro tempore
  • ceremonial position
  • given to ranking member of the majority party
  • Informal
  • Majority leader
  • Whip
  • Minority leader
  • Whip
  • Majority Policy Committee
  • Minority Policy Committee

21
Senate LeadershipMeans of Selection
22
The Committee System
  • Standing committees (19/16) and their respective
    subcommittees (88/68)
  • Select committees
  • Joint committees
  • Conference committee

23
Standing Committees
  • Standing committees are the most important arenas
    of congressional policy making.
  • Permanent exist from session to session
  • Power to receive and process legislation
  • Exception House Rules Committee
  • Jurisdiction specified by subject matter and
    generally mirrors major cabinet department
  • Assignment based on needs of members
  • Leadership based on seniority on the committee

24
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25
Other Committees
  • Select committees a temporary legislative
    committee set up to highlight or investigate a
    particular issue
  • Joint committees a legislative committee with
    members from both chambers formed to study
    particular issues
  • Conference committee a joint committee created
    to reach compromise on legislation passed by both
    chambers

26
The Staff System
  • Staffs are maintained in Washington, D.C. and
    back home.
  • Legislative assistant
  • Work with legislative drafting
  • Develop policy ideas
  • Administrative assistant
  • Work with lobbyists
  • Work on constituent requests
  • Congressional committees are also provided
    staffs.
  • Support agencies provide information support.
  • Congressional Budget Office
  • General Accounting Office
  • Congressional Research Service

27
The Growth of Congressional Staffs
28
Rules of LawmakingHow a Bill Becomes a Law
  • Filing with clerk
  • Committee deliberation
  • Debate
  • Conference committee
  • Presidential action

29
How a Bill Becomes a Law
30
How a Bill Becomes a Law
  • Legislation must be introduced in either the
    House or the Senate before it officially becomes
    a bill.
  • Assigned a bill number (H.R. 1 or S. 1)
  • Assigned to the appropriate committee based on
    jurisdiction of the standing committees

31
Committee Deliberation
  • Most of the work on legislation is conducted at
    the committee level.
  • 95 of bills die at the committee or subcommittee
    level.
  • Discharge petition may be used to pull a bill out
    of committee.

32
House Rules Committee
  • Each bill that survives committee must go through
    the Rules Committee.
  • Determines the length of debate and the nature of
    amendments that may be offered to the legislation

33
The Senates Unanimous Consent Rule
  • The Senate lacks a Rules Committee.
  • Executive Calendar (Treaties and Appointments)
  • Calendar of General Orders
  • The Senate utilizes the unanimous consent rule to
    permit bills to reach the floor.
  • Any senator can kill a bill by withholding consent

34
Debate
  • Contrary to the House, the Senate permits open
    and lengthy debate on legislation.
  • A filibuster can be used to talk a bill to
    death.
  • A cloture vote is used to defeat a filibuster
  • sixty votes necessary to end filibuster.

35
Conference Committee
  • A conference committee is called when different
    versions of a bill are passed by the Senate and
    the House and a compromise is needed.
  • Members of the committee that worked on the
    legislation serve on the committee.
  • Compromise must be approved by both the House and
    the Senate.

36
Presidential Action
  • The president may
  • sign the bill into law
  • allow the bill to become law without his
    signature
  • veto (reject) the bill with a formal veto message
  • override by two-thirds vote of both chambers
  • Pocket veto.

37
Budget Process
38
Beyond LegislationOther Congressional Powers
  • Oversight
  • Advice and Consent
  • Impeachment

39
Oversight
  • Oversight is the effort by Congress, through
    hearings, investigations, and other techniques,
    to exercise control over the activities of the
    executive agencies while legislation is being
    implemented.
  • The appropriations process is an important
    oversight tool.

40
Advice and Consent
  • The Senate must approve presidential appointments
    by a simple majority.
  • Treaties must be approved by the Senate with a
    two-thirds vote.
  • Executive agreements circumvent this process.
  • Congress can refused to appropriate funding.

41
Impeachment
  • The president and other high-ranking officials
    may be removed from office by through impeachment
    by the House and conviction in the Senate.
  • Grounds include treason, bribery, and other high
    crimes and misdemeanors.
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