The Institutions Unit IVA Congress. The Capitol Structure of Congress.

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The Institutions Unit IVA Congress

Transcript of The Institutions Unit IVA Congress. The Capitol Structure of Congress.

Page 1: The Institutions Unit IVA Congress. The Capitol Structure of Congress.

The Institutions

Unit IVA

Congress

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The Capitol

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Structure of Congress

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Powers of Congress

Lay and collect taxesBorrow moneyRegulate interstate and foreign commerceNaturalization rulesCoin money and set its valueCreate lower federal courtsDeclare warNecessary and proper laws

Bankruptcy rulesPunish counterfeitersFix weights and measuresPost office and postal roadsIssue patents and copyrightsPiracy lawsRaise army and navyProvide for militiaRun D.C.

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Non-legislative Powers

House of Representatives elects president if no electoral majorityPropose amendments with 2/3 majorities from both housesHouse of Representatives may impeach; Senate triesSenate approves presidential appointments (majority vote) and treaties (2/3 vote)

ADVICE AND CONSENT

OVERSIGHT – investigate/monitor the other branches, executive agencies

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Meeting of Congress

Both houses meet for a term of two yearsMakeup of congressional terms determined by congressional elections every two yearsTerms begin on January 3rd of odd-numbered years

2012 Elections were in November113th Congress began on term on January 3, 2013

Special sessionsPresident may call Congress in times of emergency situations or significant political developmentsPearl Harbor in December 1941

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House of Representatives Chamber

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Senate Chamber

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Evolution of Congress

From 1789 to 1932, Congress virtually dominated the national government

Exceptions under Jackson, Lincoln, T. Roosevelt, and Wilson

From 1932 to the present the President has become the focus of national government power and authority

In conjunction with expansion of government with FDR’s New Deal programs

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Electing the HouseDirectly elected by the people every two years

Most (originally) responsible to electorateFrequency of elections

Congress established 435 seats in the House in 1911Apportionment

Distribution of legislators based on state’s population

ReapportionmentRedistribution of legislators based on state’s population after decade census

RedistrictingRedrawing of congressional districts based on reapportionmentState legislatures in charge of redistricting

GerrymanderingRedistricting to favor a political party or group

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Electing the Senate

Staggered terms

State legislatures originally elected senators

“Millionaires’ Club”

Seventeenth Amendment

Popular election of senators

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Incumbency EffectCurrent office holders winning reelectionAdvantages

Name recognitionCredit claimingCaseworkVisibilityMedia exposureFund-raisingCampaign experienceVoting record

DisadvantagesMistrust of governmentUnpopular political partyRedistricting effect“Held responsible”

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Privileges of Congress

Salaries$174,000$193,400 for Senate and House leaders$223,500 for Speaker of the House

Benefits include pensions, health coverageOffice AllowancesTravel AllowancesFranking PrivilegeImmunity

Cannot be arrested during Congress businessCannot be sued for libel/slander during Congress business

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Congressional Staffers

Personal StaffDirectly work for members in D.C. and district/state offices

Committee StaffResearch and analyze issues in committees and subcommittees

Leadership StaffWork for congressional leaders such as Speaker of the House

Institutional StaffClerks, janitors, police/security of the Capitol

Support Agency Staff – non-partisanCongressional Budget Office (CBO) - financesCongressional Research Service (CRS) – think tank, analysisGovernment Accountability Office (GAO) – audits, investigations

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Congressional Term Limits

Congressional members have NO term limits

May be reelected as many times as possible

U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton (1995)Supreme Court overruled Arkansas law imposing term limits on U.S. congressional representatives

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House Districts by Party (112th Congress)

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Senate States by Party (112th Congress)

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Congressional Makeup

AgeHouse median age - 57Senate median age - 62

Occupation209 members from business200 members from law

Race/EthnicityWhites - 83.22%Blacks - 9.66%

None in Senate

Hispanics - 5.52%Asians - 1.38%

Religion56.8% Protestant

29.2% Catholic

7.3% Jewish

Gender18% female in House

18% female in Senate

Most women from Democratic Party

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Congressional LeadershipHOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Speaker of the HousePresides over the HouseMost powerful person in CongressMost powerful member from majority partyAssigns bills to committee, controls floor debate, appoints party member to committees and chairs

Majority LeaderAssists Speaker of the HousePlans party’s legislative programDirects floor debate

Minority LeaderRepresents leader of opposition party

Majority and Minority WhipsAssist in party voting, inform on voting, vote counts, voting pressure

SENATEPresident of the Senate

Vice-President presides

Votes only to break a tie

President Pro TemporeMajority party senior member to preside in absence of VP

Majority LeaderMost powerful Senate member and party spokesperson

Minority LeaderRepresents leader of opposition party

Majority and Minority WhipsRallies respective party member to votes, vote counts

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Lawmaking Process

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Bills and ResolutionsBill – proposed legislation to become law on passage by both chambers and signed by the President

Public bill – affects the general publicPrivate bill – affects a private individual

Simple Resolution (non-binding)Applied and passed by either chamber to establish rules of procedures or sense of chamber

Concurrent Resolution (non-binding)Applied and passed by both chambers to establish rules and procedures for both housesAllow a joint session of Congress, provide recess, creating a temporary joint committee

Joint ResolutionLegislative measure passed by both chambers and signed into law by PresidentFor declarations of war, temporary exceptions to laws, authorize small appropriations, establish temporary commissionsGulf of Tonkin ResolutionWar Powers Resolution

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Types of Legislative Actions

DistributiveDistribution of goods/services for general publici.e. highway construction project

RedistributiveUsing taxes on one segment of population for entitlements on another segmenti.e. welfare program

RegulatoryLimits on groups and individualsi.e. Clean Air and Water Act

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Introducing a Bill

Only a member of Congress may introduce a billMay be suggested by executive administration, interest groups, citizensRevenue bills may only originate in the House of Representatives

House of Representativeshanded to the Clerk of the House or placed in the hopperIntroduced and assigned a number, ex. H.R. 913

SenateHanded to the presiding officer or introduced on floorIntroduced and assigned a number, ex. S. 913

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The Hopper

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CommitteesSpeaker of the House/Presiding Officer of Senate assign bills to appropriate committees

The brunt of deliberating, discussing, debating of a bill is done in committees

GATEKEEPING AUTHORITY

PROPOSAL POWER

Allows for specialists to determine merits of a bill and speed up legislative process

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Types of CommitteesStanding Committee

Permanent committee over specific policy

Select CommitteeTemporary committee for specific purpose

Joint CommitteeMade up of members of both houses

Conference CommitteeTemporary committee of both houses to resolve differences of chamber versions of a bill

SubcommitteeSubset of a standing committee

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Standing CommitteesHouse

Rules

Ways and Means

Appropriations

Judiciary

Agriculture

Armed Services

Budget

Education and Labor

Foreign Affairs

Homeland Security

Energy and Commerce

Natural Resources

Science and Technology

Small Business

Veterans’ Affairs

SenateAppropriations

Finance

Judiciary

Foreign Relations

Agriculture, Nutrition, Forestry

Armed Services

Banking, Housing, Urban Affairs

Budget

Commerce, Science, Transportation

Energy and Natural Resources

Environment and Public Works

Health, Labor, Education

Homeland Security

Rules and Administration

Small Business

Veterans’ Affairs

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Committee Leadership

Committees are headed by a CHAIRPERSON

All chairpersons are from the majority party in the respective chamber

Set committee agendas, assign subcommittee members, decide on hearings and witnesses

Used to be based on seniority systemNow usually long-standing member of committee

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Committee MembershipThe percentage of a committee reflects overall percentage of political party members in respective chamber

Members desire relevant committees related to districts and/or experience

Ambitious members strive for membership in major standing committees and/or become chairperson

Committee assignments based on party leadership and patronage

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Committee and a BillCommittees can assign a bill to subcommittees

Subcommittees refer bill back to committee

Committees can TABLE a bill thereby killing it

Committees can revise and add to a bill or MARK-UP

REPORTED OUT by committee for floor debate and vote

If not reported out, House of Representatives may call for a DISCARGE PETITION (requires absolute majority, 218 votes)

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House Rules Committee

In the House of Representatives, once bills are reported out they are sent to the RULES COMMITTEE

Nothing like this in the Senate

Sets rules, restrictions, and times on bills during floor debate with input by Speaker of the House

CLOSED RULE – severe limits on floor debate and amendments

Bill proponents tend to prefer closed rule

OPEN RULE – allows floor debate and amendmentsBill opponents tend to prefer open rule

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House Floor DebateControlled by the Speaker of the House and limited by Rules Committee

Amendments must be GERMANE, or relevant, to the bill

RIDERS (additions not relevant to the bill) are not allowed

Once debate is completed or terminated, bill heads to a vote

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Senate Floor DebateThe Senate has unlimited debateAmendments and riders are allowedFILIBUSTERS (only in Senate)

A bill could be killed by senators delaying its passage by “talking it to death”

CLOTURE (only in Senate)

Debate can be ended with 60 votes; prevent filibusters

HOLDS (only in Senate)

Designed to stall or prevent a bill from being vote onAnonymous or public

Strom Thurmond filibustered for 24 hours and 18 minutes against the Civil Rights Act of 1957

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Voting on a BillQUORUM/QUORUM CALL

A majority of members must be present to vote, conduct business

218 in the House; 51 in the Senate

PARTY VOTE

House of RepresentativesElectronic vote

Roll call

Teller vote

SenateRoll call

Voice vote

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Finalizing a Bill

Once either chamber passes a bill it is ENGROSSED and sent to the other chamber for passage

Both chambers must pass an identical bill

If there are differences (riders, amendments), then the versions sent to CONFERENCE COMMITTEE

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To the President

President signs the bill into law

May also become law after 10 days

President vetoes the billCongress may override veto with 2/3 majority of both housesPocket veto

President ignores bill; after 10 days if Congress has adjourned, the bill dies

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Other Legislative Tactics

EARMARKSExpenditures for specific recipients determined on appropriations-based legislation

PORK BARRELPass appropriations and/or projects for one’s specific district/state

LOGROLLINGSupport a bill for support on another bill

CAUCUSESInformal voting blocs among members who share common goals

i.e. Congressional Black Caucus

LEGISLATIVE VETOReject executive action by House and/or SenateRuled unconstitutional in Immigration and Naturalization Services v. Chadha

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How a Member Represents and Votes

RepresentationalDelegates and trustees of their districts/statesVote based on interests and beliefs of districts/statesCASEWORK

OrganizationalInfluenced by party members, president, lobbyistsVote based on party linesPATRONAGE

AttitudinalBased on ideology, personal beliefs

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