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Legislative Branch. Chapters 11 and 12 pg 203 -237. Constituents. The person who lives in a given electoral district and is represented by a given elected official. What do I have to do to be a Senator?. 30 years old American citizen for 9 years Live in the state you want to represent.
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Legislative Branch Chapters 11 and 12 pg 203 -237
Constituents • The person who lives in a given electoral district and is represented by a given elected official
What do I have to do to be a Senator? • 30 years old • American citizen for 9 years • Live in the state you want to represent
What do I have to do to be a Representative? • 25 years old • Citizen for 7 years • Live in the state you want to represent
Is that all? • You must be electable • You must raise money • You must be skilled at the ‘political game’ • For reelection you must show that you cam bring back taxpayer-funded projects for your district • Do you agree with this list? Why?
House Leadership • Speaker of the House: Nominated by the majority, voted on by whole house, most powerful member of Congress • Majority leader: Party with most members elected to manage legislation on the floor • Minority leader: Party with fewer members elected to manage legislation on the floor John Boehner Eric Cantor Nancy Pelosi
House Leadership • Majority Whip/Minority Whip assist the floor leaders • responsible for keeping the leadership informed • Persuade party members to vote party lines Kevin McCarthy
Senate Leadership • President of the Senate: Vice President • President Pro Tempore: Senior senator of the majority party • Majority leader: Spokesmen for majority party, works with other member to get things done • Minority Leader: helps devise strategies and shape party policy Vice President Joe Biden Daniel Inouye Harry Reid
Senate Leadership • Majority/Minority Whips: assist floor leaders Richard Durbin Jon Kyl
Congressional Committees • Standing Committees: permanent committees that handle most business • Subcommittees: review proposed legislation • Select/Special Committees: investigate specific problems • Joint Committees: members of both houses • Conference Committees: temporary joint committee to iron difference in each version of a specific bill
How a bill becomes a LAw
Step 1. IDEA: Congressperson Sponsors the bill
Step 2: Sponsor introduces the Bill to his/her house
Step 3: Bill is assigned a Subcommittee Committee Recommended Favorably killed
Step 4: Bill is Placed on the calendar to be heard on the floor House: goes to the house Rules Committee to decide if the specifics of the bill are ready for debate
Step 5: Debate
VOTE 1. Voice 2. Standing 3. Teller 4. Roll Call Must be used to overturn a veto
Step 6: Bill goes to the other house and repeats steps 2-5 House Senate All tax bills begin in the house
Step 7: Bill goes to the Conference Committee Takes the bills from each house and combines them into one bill
Step8: Bill Goes back to each house to OK the new version OK House Senate
President Step9: VETO Doesn’t Sign Goes back to congress-- 2/3 can pass it SIGN IT 10 days Congress in session Congress not in session Pocket VETO LAW
BILL IS A LAW
Terms • Riders: an additional provision added to a bill or other measure under the consideration by a legislature, having little connection with the subject matter of the bill • Party Discipline: is the ability of a parliamentary group of a political party to get its members to support the policies of their party leadership. In liberal democracies, it usually refers to the control that party leaders have over its legislature
Veto: power or right vested in one branch of a government to cancel or postpone the decisions, enactments, etc., of another branch, especially the right of a president, governor, or other chief executive to reject bills passed by the legislature • Pocket veto: a veto of a bill brought about by the president's failure to sign it within ten days of the adjournment of Congress • Veto Override: ides the veto by a two-thirds majority in each house, it becomes law without the President's signature.
Function of Congress • Levying taxes • Appropriations (spending bills) • Joint resolutions • Amendments • Declaring of War
Representative Funtions • Delegate: speaks or acts on behalf of Congress • Trustee: holds property, authority, or a position of trust • Partisan: a committed member of a political party • Casework: solving problems for constituents • Pork-barrel legislations: send money/projects back to home district • Logrolling: trading favors
Oversite functions • Confirmation: approving of appointed positions of the president such as ambassadors, Secretary of Departments, Supreme Court Justices • Ratification: Approve Treaties • Impeachement • House of Representatives: formal accusations against federal officials including the president • Senate: conducts the trial and votes whether or not to remove from office
How can I be a leader in Congress? • Committee Membership is proportional to congress membership • Most all house members serve on at least one, and usually 2 -3 committees • Senator (due to small numbers) serve on 5 – 6 • Committee seats are given with strings attached (you ask to be put on a committee you owe your party) • Chairs (leaderships role) is usually by seniority (who has been there the longest)
Path of Committees • Hearing: Listening to testimonies, gathering information from interested people, and experts • Markup session: committee members determine the final language of a bill • Report: when the subcommittee tell the full House or Senate whether or not they recommend a bill
Fillabuster • designate obstructionist tactics in legislative assemblies. It has particular reference to the U.S. Senate, where the tradition of unlimited debate is very strong
Cloture: process aimed at bringing debate to a quick end • Riders: an additional provision added to a bill or other measure under the consideration by a legislature, having little connection with the subject matter of the bill
Congressional Voting • Voice: members all together shout of aye or no • Standing: First supports stand, then opponents stand • Roll Call: Each member vote is officially registered by inserting their vote id in machine and voting yes, no or present
Presidential option for a bill arriving at his desk • Sign the bill into law • Veto the bill • Take not action on the bill, at the end of 10 days the bill becomes law without the president's signature