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Congress: The Basics. Essential Information. IV. Institutions of National Government: The Congress , the Presidency, the Bureaucracy, and the Federal Courts 35–45%. A. The major formal and informal institutional arrangements of power
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Congress: The Basics Essential Information
IV. Institutions of National Government: The Congress, the Presidency, theBureaucracy, and the Federal Courts35–45% A. The major formal and informal institutional arrangements of power B. Relationships among these four institutions and varying balances of power C. Linkages between institutions and the following: 1. Public opinion and voters 2.Interest groups 3. Political parties 4. The media 5. State and local governments
HW: Read chapter 7 pp. 228 – 260 by 10/1 A day & 10/2 B day
Answer this question • Should Congress reflect the will of the people? • Or should they pay attention to their own points of view, even if they disagree with their constituents?
Legislative Branch = Congress • Location in Constitution • Article I • Term of Congress = 2 years • 2 one year Sessions • Session = January-December
Connecticut Compromise • Bicameral Legislature • two chambers • Senate & House of Representatives • Senate • states represented equally • House of Representatives • states represented according to the size of their population - population represented equally • in 1789 1:30,000 / Today 1:600,000
Constituency The people a politician represents • Senate • people living in the state • House of Representatives • people living in the district
Size and apportionment • Reapportionment = reallocation • Constitution guarantees at least 1 representative per state • 7 states with one seat • Congress reapportions House seats every 10 years, after a census • Reapportionment Act of 1929 set permanent size of the House at 435 members. • 1 seat = about 700,000 people • Increases or decreases the number of seats a state has in the House plus electoral votes • Influence increases with representation
Districts • 1842: • Congress stipulated all seats in the House would be filled from single member districts • each state legislature assigned the responsibility of drawing the boundary lines of its congressional district.
What is gerrymandering? • Legislative process by which the majority party in each state legislature redraws congressional districts to ensure the maximum number of seats for its candidates • Consequences? • Protects incumbents and discourages challenger • Strengthens majority party while weakening the opposition • Increases or decreases minority representation
Supreme Court and redistricting • Historically rural areas dominated state legislatures, so congressional districts often favored less populous rural areas. • Wesberry v Sanders (1964) – “one person, one vote” • Triggered widespread redistricting • Gave cities and suburbs greater representation • Limits on redistricting: • Districts must be equally populated • Districts must be compact. Lines must be contiguous • Cannot dilute minority voting strength • Districts lines CANNOT be drawn based solely on race, but race can be a factor • Gerrymandering has not been eliminated
Legislative Branch • Seniority • length of time spent in office • length of continuous time spent assigned to a particular committee • committee assignments & reelection of incumbents • Incumbents • Single most important factor in determining outcome of election • person currently holding public office and seeking reelection • Over 90% get reelected each term in the House of Representatives • in the Senate, incumbents are reelected at a rate over 75%
Table 7.4: What are the advantages of incumbency? Money $$$$ - raise more campaign contributions PACs contribute more to incumbents outpend challengers 2:1
Why are incumbents reelected? • More multiple choice questions related to this paradox than any other topic: • A majority of Americans disapprove of the job Congress is doing. • Same polls report that most Americans believe their own representative deserves to be reelected. Make sure you can explain the reasons why incumbents are usually reelected.
Consequences? • Congress contains a large number of experienced leaders • Continuity of leadership • Continuity of policy • Continuity discourages radical change • Encourages close relationships with interest groups • No incentive to reform campaign finance laws • Incumbents benefit
So, is the high rate of reelection a good thing or a bad thing? Explain.
Watch this video and answer the following: This clip shows: • The power of committee chairmen • Congressional oversight of departments The video clip shows lively banter between the Committee Oversight & Government Reform Chairman Darryl Issa and Department of Labor officials regarding a change in the process for reporting labor statistics. • Who has a great deal of influence over the issues that the committee chooses to investigate? • The committee chair of any committee is typically a member of the ______________?(hint: which party?) • Why might this discussion be described as “partisan”?
How Congress is organized • Role of Political parties • Key role in organization • Majority party = party with the most votes • Minority party = party with the 2nd most votes • Majority party advantages • Committee chairs • Chooses Speaker of the House • Assigns bills to committees • Holds majority on each committee • Controls the House Rules committee • Sets the legislative agenda
The House of Representatives • More formal structure than the Senate; why? • Example: debate is much more restricted • Speaker of the House • Presides over the House • Oversees House business • Stands second in line for presidential succession • Other House leaders • Majority leader – elected leader of the party in control • Minority leader – elected leader of the minority party • Elected whips – maintain close contact with members & try to ensure party unity on important votes
The Senate • Smaller, less formally organized • Vice President • Constitution: president of the Senate • Other Senate leaders • President pro temp presides in the absence of the vice president; held by a member of the majority party with the longest service in the Senate. • Majority leader – elected leader of the party that controls the Senate; this is the true leader of the Senate • Minority leader – elected leader of the minority party
Committee System • Importance • Dominant role in policymaking • Particularly in the House • Standing committees • Permanent; focus on legislation in a particular area • ex: foreign relations, agriculture • All bills referred to standing committees: amended, passed, killed • Fosters development of expertise • Divided into subcommittees (ex: committee on Energy and Commerce, subcommittee on Environment and the Economy)
Other types of committees • Select committees – formed for a specific purpose, for a limited time • Usually to conduct an investigation (Senate Special Committee on Aging) • Joint committees – include members of both houses • Focus public attention on a major issue • Ex: Joint Committee on Taxation • Conference Committees • Temporary • Resolve differences between House and Senate versions of a bill • Members appointed by party leaders • From the committees that originally considered the bill
House Rules committee • Controlled by the Speaker • “traffic cop”, Speaker’s “right arm” • Sets guidelines for floor debate • Gives each bill a rule that places it on the calendar, limits time for debate, determines the type of amendments that will be allowed • Closed rule • Strict time limits on debates • Forbids amendments from the floor • Open rule • Less strict time limits on debates • Permits amendments from the floor
Committees • House Committee on Ways and Means • Taxation, tariffs, other revenue raising measure • Committee Chairs and the Committee System • Chairs have great power and privilege • Call meetings • schedule hearings • hire staff • Recommend majority members to sit on conference committees • Select all subcommittee chairs • Receive favors from lobbyists, contribution from PACs
Committee Chairs • Historically: chosen by seniority system • Majority party member with the most continuous service on the committee automatically became the chair • Now elected • Seniority is still the norm for selecting chairs in both chambers
Legislative Process • 5,000 bills introduced each year • Only about 125, or 2.5%, become laws • Process • Lengthy, deliberate, fragmented • Formidable obstacles that defeat most bills
Creating bills • Anyone can write a bill • Most are not written by members of Congress • Most originate in the executive branch • Business, labor, agriculture and other interest groups often draft bills • Only members of Congress can introduce bills • Drop them in the “hopper”, a box hanging on the edge of the clerk’s desk.
Process • Committees • Subcommittee – study, hearing, revisions, approval • Most bills die in committee (pigeonholed or buried) • House: discharge petition can blast a bill out of committee – needs majority of the House • Floor Action • House: Rules Committee decides time for debate, if amendments are allowed • Floor debate & vote • Senate: allows unlimited debate • Filibuster, cloture • Senators can threaten filibuster
Conference Action • Made up of members from original House and Senate committees • this version is returned to each chamber for a vote How Members Vote • delegate model: cast votes that reflect preference of constituents • Trustee model: use best judgment to make policy in the interests of the people
Congress & the Executive Branch • Oversight • Review of executive agencies, departments or offices • Senate confirms cabinet heads and presidential appointments to federal courts • Methods of oversight • Guidelines for new agencies • Hearings and investigations • Budget control • Reorganizing an agency • Evaluating an agency’s program
Congress & the Executive Branch • Foreign Policy • Constitutional division of power • Congress declares war; Senate ratifies treaties • President = Commander-in-chief; can wage war and negotiate treaties • War Powers Resolution( most exams ask about this) • Passed by Congress in 1973 • Response to Vietnam • Ensures Congress has a voice in presidential decisions committing troops • President must notify Congress within 48 hours of deploying troops and • Must bring troops home within 60 -90 days unless Congress extends it