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Organization of Congress – Party Leadership. Key Terms. Speaker of the House – the presiding officer of the House of Rep., selected from the membership. Floor Leader – A spokesperson for a party in Congress; one who directs party decisions and strategy
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Key Terms • Speaker of the House – the presiding officer of the House of Rep., selected from the membership. • Floor Leader – A spokesperson for a party in Congress; one who directs party decisions and strategy • Majority leader – the legislative leader of the party holding the majority of seats in the House or Senate. • Minority Leader – the legislative leader and spokesperson for the party holding the minority of the seats in the House or Senate • Whip – a senator or representative who works with party leaders to communicate views, solicit support before votes are taken and keep track of how voting is likely to go
The Party Leadership • Power in the House tends to be centralized in the hands of its leaders because membership is larger than it is in the Senate • The leaders of the House are as follows: The Speaker of the House, the two Floor Leaders, and two assistant leaders or whips • The Speaker of the House is always a member of the majority party and is often the most powerful member of Congress • The Speaker rules on questions of parliamentary procedure, influences committee assignments, channels bills, appoints party leaders, and presides over many House debates
The Party Leadership • The Speaker must call on a member in order for them to speak • The majority leader is the Speaker’s top assistant • The minority leader heads and organizes the opposition to the majority party • Both the majority and minority are assisted by whips • Whips inform members of upcoming votes on bills, count numbers of expected votes, and pressure members to support the leadership in critical votes • Few votes are called for without the leadership knowing what the outcome will be
Leadership in the Senate • The president of the Senate is the Vice President of the United States, but has little authority • Because the VP doesn’t attend session often enough, a president pro tempore – a leading or senior member of the majority party – is selected to reside • The role of president is largely ceremonial and lacks real power • The floor leaders hold the real leadership power in the Senate, although it’s much less centralized than in the House
Leadership in the Senate • The majority leader is often the most influential and has the privilege of speaking first on the floor • Majority leaders and minority leaders consult with each other to set agenda • The minority leader’s power often resides in how well he gets along with the majority leader • The Senate also has party whips to assist • Senators are less tied to party and more independent in the way they vote