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1. Chapter 12Congress in Action
3. Section 1—Congress Organizes Why It Matters:
How Congress is organized and how its leaders are chosen and who they are, plays a large part in determining what the nation’s lawmakers can and will do.
4. Section 1—Congress Organizes Political Dictionary:
Speaker of the House
President of the Senate
President pro tempore
Party caucus
Floor leader
Whip
Committee chairman
Seniority rule
5. Section 1—Congress Organizes Congress Convenes
January 3 of every odd numbered year
Opening Day in the House
Clerk presides
Roll call
Speaker chosen—sworn in by “Dean”
Other members sworn in
Democrats to the right, Republicans to the left
Other officers and rules
Permanent committees
6. Section 1—Congress Organizes Congress Convenes (cont)
Opening Day in the Senate
Continuous body since 1789
New members are sworn in
State of the Union Message
“He shall from time to time give to the Congress Information on the State of the Union, and recommend to their Considerations such Measures as he shall judge necessary and expedient. --Article II, Section 3
7. Section 1—Congress Organizes The Presiding Officers
The Speaker of the House
Duties are to preside and keep order
Interprets rules, appoints committees
Must vacate the chair to debate
Does not usually vote except in a tie
8. Section 1—Congress Organizes The Presiding Officers (cont)
The President of the Senate
Vice President of the United States
May only vote in a tie
A president pro tempore is named
Usually the longest serving member of the majority party
9. Section 1—Congress Organizes Party Officers
The Party Caucus
Partisan issues
Party organization
The Floor Leaders
Majority & Minority leaders
Whips—discipline/police members
10. Section 1—Congress Organizes Committee Chairmen
From the majority party
Control agendas/witnesses
Seniority Rule
Longest service determines leadership
Used since the late 1800s
Criticism of the Seniority Rule
From safe districts
Not always the “best” people
House now limits to six years
11. Section 2—Committees in Congress Objectives:
Explain how the standing committees function.
Describe the duties and responsibilities of the House Rules Committee.
Compare the functions of the joint and conference committees.
12. Section 2—Committees in Congress Why It Matters:
The lawmaking process in both houses is built around committees, and these bodies play a major role in shaping the public policies of the United States.
13. Section 2—Committees in Congress Political Dictionary:
Standing committee
Select committee
Joint committee
Conference committee
14. Section 2—Committees in Congress Standing Committees
Committee Assignments
19 in the House, 17 in the Senate today
House size varies from 10 to 75
Senate size varies from 14 to 28
The House Rules Committee
Traffic cop—all bills need a “rule”
Select Committees
A special purpose/investigation
15. Section 2—Committees in Congress Joint and Conference Committees
Select committees—special purpose or routine
Conference committees
16. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House Objectives:
List the first steps in the introduction of a bill to the House
Describe what happens to a bill once it is referred to a committee
Explain how House leaders schedule debate on a bill
Explain what happens to a bill on the House floor, and identify the final step in the passage of a bill in the House
17. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House Why It Matters:
The lawmaking process is quite complicated—indeed, it may be likened to a very difficult obstacle course. Only a small fraction of the bills introduced in the House survive that course.
18. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House Political Dictionary:
Bill
Joint Resolution
Concurrent Resolution
Resolution
Rider
Discharge petition
19. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The First Steps
Many bills are proposed by the executive branch
Revenue bills must originate in the House
Types of Bills and Resolutions
Public bills apply to the whole nation
Private bills apply to certain persons or places
20. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The First Steps (cont)
Joint Resolutions—force of law
They deal with temporary issues
Concurrent Resolutions
Do not have the force of law—do not require the president’s signature
Resolutions
Are taken up by only one house
Sometimes a “rider” is attached—often to appropriations bills—”Christmas trees”
21. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The First Steps (cont)
The First Reading
By the clerk after introduction
House bills are “H. R. #”
Senate bills are “S #”
Given a title
Entered into the Journal and Congressional Record
Not literal—can be altered within 5 days
22. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The Bill in Committee
Standing committees are sieves to weed out legislation-pigeonholed
A Discharge Petition can get a bill out of committee—requires 218 signatures
Gathering Information
Subcommittees—80 in the House and 70 in the Senate
Travel (junkets), take testimony
23. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The Bill in Committee (cont)
Committee Actions
Report the bill favorably— “do pass”
Refuse to report the bill—pigeonhole
Report the bill in amended form
Report the bill with an unfavorable recommendation
Report a committee bill—a new substitute bill written by the committee
24. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House Scheduling Floor Debate
Calendars
The Calendar of the Committee of the Whole (Union Calendar)
Dealing with revenues, appropriations, gov prop
The House Calendar—all other public bills
The Calendar of the Committee of the Whole House—private bills
Corrections Calendar—bills taken out of order—usually no opposition
Discharge calendar—to get bills out of committee
25. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House Scheduling Floor Debate (cont)
Rules
All bills must have a “rule”
Some bills are privileged—appropriations/revenue, conference reports
The House may suspend its rules by a ? vote and enact something in a single day
26. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The Bill on the Floor
A second reading
The Committee of the Whole
A quicker way to move business
The Speaker steps down
The five minute rule is used for debate
Debate
Greatly limited because of the size
27. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The Bill on the Floor
Procedural motions may be considered
May use a voice vote
May request a standing vote or division of the House
1/5 can demand a teller vote—an old practice not often used today
28. Section 3—How a Bill Becomes a Law: The House The Bill on the Floor
A roll-call vote or record vote is most common today—electronic
15 minutes are usually allowed
Final Steps
Engrossing or printing
Third reading and final vote
29. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Objectives:
Explain how a bill is introduced in the Senate.
Compare the Senate’s rules for debate with those in the House.
Describe the role of conference committees in the legislative process.
Evaluate the actions the President can take after both houses have passes a bill.
30. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Why It Matters:
A bill that survives the legislative obstacle course in one house must still be passed in the other chamber—and can face yet more hurdles before it can become law.
31. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Political Dictionary:
Filibuster
Cloture
Veto
Pocket veto
32. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Introducing the Bill
Introduced by a senator, given a number and title and then referred to a committee.
More informal/less strict about rules
Only one calendar—bills are called up at the discretion of the majority leader
33. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Rules for Debate
Virtually unlimited in length
No rule about “germane”
No ability to move the previous question
Debate ends by unanimous consent
Two-speech rule on any matter
34. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Rules for Debate (cont)
Filibuster– “talk a bill to death”
Huey Long—15 hours in 1935
Strom Thurmond—24 hours 18 minutes
Over 200 matters have been killed this way over the past century
Controlling rules like remaining standing are not usually enforced
35. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Rules for Debate (cont)
The Cloture Rule
Rule XXII in the Standing Rules came about in 1917
16 members can call for cloture---then two days must pass
60% of senators can invoke cloture
After another 30 hours a final vote
36. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate Conference Committees
When different versions of the same legislation are passed in one house a conference is appointed to resolve the differences.
Usually committee leaders from each house so it seldom fails
37. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate The President Acts
The President can sign a bill and it becomes law
The President may veto a law and return it to the originating house
They may re-pass the bill with ? majority and it becomes law
38. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate The President Acts (cont)
The President may allow the act to become law without signing within 10 days
The president may hold the bill without signing. If Congress adjourns it is considered a “pocket veto.”
In 1996 the President was given the Line Item Veto for parts of appropriations
Declared unconstitutional in 1998
39. Section 4—The Bill in the Senate