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CONGRESS VS. PARLIAMENT
Congress- “a coming together”
Parliament- “to talk”
These differences affect: -how a person becomes a member
-what a person does as a member
Unlike parliament, candidates for Congress run in primaries.
Congressmen think independently for themselves.
SALARY $
$150,000 (in 2004) “clerk-hire” allowance Allowances for travel, computer etc. “Franking Privilege” -mail newsletters and other document for
free Senators and Representatives w/seniority
-Office budget-Legislative assistance allowance -Free to hire as many staff members as they want w/ the $
Congress tends to be decentralized, with each member more interested in his or her views and their voters’ views.
THE EVOLUTION OF CONGRESS
Bicameral Legislature --------- Two chamber -promotes decentralization
Six Phases In House History1. Phase One: The Powerful House 2. Phase Two: The Divided House3. Phase Three: The Speaker Rules 4. Phase Four: The House Rules5. Phase Five: The Member Rule6. Phase Six: The Leadership Returns
Senators chosen by state legislatures --- Popular vote
Major issue is Senate development=filibuster
Filibuster-prolonged speech or series of speeches, made to delay action in a legislative assembly
There have been efforts to restrict filibusters
Who is Congress?
KEY TERMS
“Elastic Clause”- Grants power to pass laws that are necessary and proper for carrying out the enumerated list of powers
Bicameral Legislature- a law making body made up of two chambers or parts
Cloture- Mechanism requiring sixty senators to vote cutting off debate (used in Filibusters)
Committee system- Members of Congress are assigned to committees to investigate problems with suggested bills
Conference committees- Joint committees to iron out differences between Senate and House versions of a specific piece of legislature
Standing committees- Permanently established legislative committees that consider and are responsible for legislation within a certain subject area
Joint Committees- Congressional committees on a few subject-matter areas with membership drawn from both houses
Select committees- Congressional committees appointed or a limited time and purpose
Subcommittees- Specialized groups within standing committees
Committee chairs- Important influencers if the congressional agenda. Schedule hearings, appoint subcommittees
Discharge petitions- Petition that gives majority of the House of Representatives the authority to bring a issue to the floor in the face of a committee inaction
Majority leader- Responsible for scheduling bills, influencing committee assignments, and rounding up votes in behalf of the party’s legislative positions
Minority leader- The leader of the minority party in the House of Representatives or in the Senate
Whips- Party leader who works with the majority leader or minority leader to count votes beforehand and lean on wavers whose votes are crucial to a bill favored by the party
Safe district- Districts in which incumbents win by margins of 55 percent or more
President pro tempore- Second-highest ranking official of the U.S.
Speaker of the House- Office mandated by the Constitution, chosen by majority party, has formal and informal powers and also second in line to succeed to the presidents vacancy
Filibuster- A strategy used by the Senate where opponents of a piece of legislation try to talk it to death, based on the tradition of unlimited debate
Floor action-formal session of the full senate.
House Rules Committee- Group of members from the U.S. House of Representatives who review all the bills and decide if and in what order, the bills will be presented to the House for consideration
House Ways and Means Committee-The H.O.R. committee that writes the tax codes ,subject to the approval of congress
Franking privilege- The ability of members to mail letters to their constituents free of charge by substituting their facsimile signature or postage