Constituent
A person who is represented by a legislator or an elected/appointed official
Earmarks / Porks
Book def: special provisions in legislation to set aside funds for projects that have not passed an impartial evaluation by agencies of the executive branch.
Unnecessary spending that congressmen make
Congressional oversight/investigation powers
Both are powers of Congress
Functions of Congress
Filibuster
person in senate who refuses to die or go away, they don’t have a limit. Usually deigned to kill legislation
Book def: the use of the Senate’s tradition of unlimited debate as a delaying tactic to block bills or nominations
Franking/Junkets
Other incumbency advantages
Both are privileges of Congress
Others:
Name ID (being known as a celebrity)
Fundraising
Lawmaking/Legislative Process
Lawmaking is the principal and most obvious function of any legislature
1) bill is introduced by Congress (house or senate)
2) is then referred to a committee in the chamber where it was introduced (house or senate) to be studied
3) Is then sent to the floor of the house or senate to be debated
4) Is sent to the other chamber (house or senate) to be studied
5) after the bill has passed each chamber, if the two versions of the bill contain different provisions, a conference committee is formed to write a compromise bill
6) if Bill is approved by both chambers, it is sent to the president to sign or veto
Reconciliation/conference committee
Reconciliation - in Congress, a special rule that can be applied to budget bills sent from the House of Representatives to the Senate (bypasses the filibuster)
Conference Committee - joint committees set up to achieve agreement between the House and the Senate on the wording of legislative acts that were passed by the chambers in different forms
GerryMandering
Redrawing legislative district lines to benefit incumbent elites
Book def: the redrawing of legislative district boundary lines for the purpose of obtaining partisan advantage. The district is said to be gerrymandered when it’s shape is altered substantially to determine which party will win it.
Reapportionment
The allocation of seats in the House of Representatives to each state after a census
Redistricting
The redrawing of the boundaries of the congressional districts within each state
Baker v. Carr (1962)
Reynolds v. Sims (1964)
Speaker of the House
Senate Majority Leader
The leader of the majority party in the senate
Goals of Congressmen & Senators
Impeachment/conviction
Veto power
Head of State vs Head of Gov
HOS - the role of the president as ceremonial head of the government
HOG - leads the country’s gov (usually the executive branch)
Symbolic powers of the president / persuasion
Chief executive
Executive Orders/Executive Actions
Commander in Chief
Appointment powers
The presidents authority to fill a government office or position