Title: The United States Congress
1The United States Congress
- Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you
were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself. - Mark Twain
2Differences in the House and Senate
- The House of Representatives
- More partisan and unified
- More loyalty to party
- More structured and organized
- Majority rules always
- Limited debate and amendments
- The Senate
- Senators more powerful individually
- Less party-oriented and party-dependent
- Looser rules of debate and amendments
- Minority can block the majority (the
filibuster)
3Special Rules of the Senate
- Unlimited debate
- Bills brought to floor by
- consent of party leaders
- Filibusters
- (can be ended by a
- cloture vote,60 votes)
- The hold put on bills
- non-germane amendments
-
4Structure of the House
- Chosen from the Majority Party
- Speaker of the House
- Nancy Pelosi (D - CA)
- Elected by House members
- Only Congressional office mentioned by the
Constitution - Duties controls debate, approves committee
assignments, designates which bills are
considered by the House
5Structure of the House
- The Majority Leader
- Steny Hoyer (D MD)
- The Majority Whip
- James Clyburn (D SC)
6Structure of the House
- The Minority Leader
- John Boehner (R OH)
- The Whip
- Roy Blunt (R MO)
7Structure of the Senate
- President of the Senate
- Dick Cheney
- Duties
- presides over the Senate
- can not vote unless there is a tie
- rarely present in the Senate
8Structure of the Senate
- The Majority Leader
- Harry Reid (D NV)
- The Majority Whip
- Richard Durban ( D - IL)
9Structure of the Senate
- The Minority Leader
- Mitch McConnell ( R - KY)
- The Minority Whip
- Trent Lott ( R - MS)
10The Committees
- Four Types
- Standing (permanent)
- Joint (for investigations)
- Select (info gathering)
- Conference (to reconcile
- different bills from
- House and Senate)
11The Committees
- Most Important (House)
- Ways And Means
- Appropriations
- Rules
- Most Important (Senate)
- Finance
- Judiciary
- Appropriations
12The Committees
- Chair Positions
- Based on seniority
- Majority party holds chairs
- Power to hold or move bills forward or
pigeonhole them - Conducts hearings
13The Committees
- Staff
- Does research
- Gathers information
- Assigned to committees
- or to Congress itself
Rep. Sam Hall (R TX)
14Powers of Congress
- Non-legislative
- Investigative (i.e. Watergate)
- Power to subpoena witnesses and gather information
15Powers of Congress
- Non-legislative
- Electoral chooses president when no majority
is achieved in Electoral College
16Powers of Congress
- Non-legislative
- Executive Senate Confirms appointments of
the president - Also confirms treaties
17Powers of Congress
- Non-legislative
- Impeachment House files charges,
- Senate acts as jury, Chief Justice presides
18Powers of Congress
- Non-legislative
- Amendment two thirds of House and Senate
needed to send amendments to States (3/4 needed
for ratification)
19Powers of Congress
- Types
- Expressed Article I, Section VIII, clauses 1 -
17 - Implied necessary and proper (clause 18)
- (the Elastic Clause)
To make all Laws which shall be necessary and
proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing
Powers
20The Electoral Connection
- Advantages of the incumbent
-
franking or unlimited mailings to home district
21The Electoral Connection
Advantages of the incumbent
Money and the ability to raise money
22The Electoral Connection
Advantages of the incumbent
Constituency service
http//www.chetedwards.com/
23The Electoral Connection
Advantages of the incumbent
Credit claiming
Position taking
Name recognition
24The Electoral Connection
- Advantages of the incumbent
- Lack of quality opponents
-
Ignorant voters
25The Electoral Connection
Re-districting
Scandal
Re-alignment of electorate 1932, 1994, 2006?
26The Electoral Connection
- Usually nonfactors
- Foreign Policy Economy coattails
- Can be factors occasionally (2006, 2008?)
27How a Bill Becomes A Law!
28How a Bill Becomes A Law!
- Bill is introduced by a member in House
Hello, Bill!
YouTube - I'm Just a Bill
29How a Bill Becomes A Law!
- Bill sent to the Rules Committee, to determine
which committee is to work on it (or it can be
pigeonholed)
Bill dies
30How a Bill Becomes A Law!
- Sent to the Committee, assigned to a subcommittee
- Subcommittee holds hearings, performs studies,
and makes revisions (mark-up)
31How a Bill Becomes A Law!
- Subcommittee reports it back to full committee
- Committee can either
-
pigeonhole it
Approve it
Kill it!
32How a Bill Becomes A Law!
- Back to the Rules Committee
- Sets guidelines on
- length of debate
- amendments, yes/no
- type of vote
- put on the calendar
33How a Bill Becomes A Law!
- Full House Debate
- YES on to the Senate
- NO bummer!
Bill is killed!
34How A Bill Becomes a Law!
- Bill introduced to the Senate by a member
- Assigned to appropriate committee by Senate
leadership (no Rules Committee in the Senate)
McConnell
Reid
35How A Bill Becomes a Law!
- Subcommittee hearings, mark-ups, etc.
- Report to the full committee
36How A Bill Becomes a Law!
- Committee can kill it or pass it
- Sends it to the Senate leadership to be put on
the calendar
37How A Bill Becomes a Law!
- Full Senate debate, filibusters, amendments,
final vote - If yes conference committee
- If no big bummer!
38How A Bill Becomes a Law!
- Conference Committee
- made up of both House and Senate members
- works out differences in the two bills
- Sent back to original
- body for final vote
- No debate or
- amendments
- Yes or No
39How A Bill Becomes a Law!
- Sent to President
- If signed
- ITS A LAW!
-
Veto sent back to Congress for possible 2/3
override
40Influences on Legislation
The President
The Courts
Events
The Media
Interest Groups
41Influences on Legislation
The Party
Constituent demands
AP Government Classes
Mean people