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Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

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Most are not outsiders to politics. They are involved in state, city, or county politics.
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Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7
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Page 1: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Exam on Congress

Monday

May 11th

Period 7

Page 2: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What do most members do before they enter

Congress?

Page 3: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Most are not outsiders to politics. They are involved in state, city, or county politics.

Page 4: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Who are constituents?

Page 5: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Those people who live in a legislatures home districts and states who depend on a legislative leader.

Page 6: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What is pork or “bringing home the BACON?”

Page 7: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Projects or grants that are won for a legislature's district. The money comes from the federal “pork barrel” or treasury. EX: $ FOR BRIDGES

Page 8: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What is casework?

Page 9: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Personal services provides by members of Congress to their constituents. Members or their staff provide assist to people in combating Federal red tape.

Page 10: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What are the differences between members of the House and the Senate?

Page 11: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

SENATE-6 years --high status, at least five million dollars needed to run for election in a small state.

House-2 years---at least $1 million needed to run in a small district.

Page 12: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Why does the reapportionment of seats in House of Representatives occur?

Page 13: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Every ten years there a census that includes population.

NY has lost Congressional representation to the South West and Florida since 1980.

Page 14: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Why are Congressional committees important?

Page 15: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Committees are the work horse in Congress. Members are the one’s that debates and write bills that may or may not be voted on by Congress.

Page 16: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What role do Congressional caucuses play?

Page 17: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

It is a group of members of the United States Congress that meets to pursue common legislative objectives. There goal is to send a proposal to or pressure a committee on an issue.

Page 18: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Why do incumbents have a far better chance of winning reelection?

Page 19: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

They have name recognition, experience, and usually have greater access to money.

Page 20: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What type of challengers do incumbent members get worried about?

Page 21: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

They get worried when there is outcry against current members, the challenger has access to money, and key people start backing them.

Page 22: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What do conference committees play in the legislative process?

Page 23: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

If the Senate does not pass a bill that the House passed earlier on, they refer it to a joint conference committee for compromise.

Page 24: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What are examples of Congress checking the power of the other branches?

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The oversight of agencies.Confirmation of Court Judges and Presidential Cabinet members

Override Presidential VetoesPotential AmendmentsImpeachment

Page 26: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

How are committee chairs selected?

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The most important is seniority and experience. A person’s background is considered.

Page 28: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Before a bill reaches the President, what is required in Congress?

Page 29: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

After the House passes the bill, the Senate needs to pass the same bill by a majority vote.

Page 30: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

If the President vetoes a bill, what options does Congress have?

Page 31: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

Both houses need to pass the bill by 2/3 vote.

Page 32: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What is a Christmas tree bill?

Page 33: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

A bill that offers several amendments. The more--the merrier--everyone is happy with the bill.

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In the Senate, what is a filibuster?When one member of Senate wants to talk a bill to death.

EX: Former Strom Thurmond spoke for 24 hours and 18 minutes to keep the US Senate from voting on a civil rights bill in August 1957.

Page 35: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

What power does the Speaker of the House have?

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The Speaker of the House controls the scheduling of bills. They Speaker decides when and if bills are debated on.

Page 37: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

How do members of Congress serve their districts? What gets in the way? (Print these out and study)

I. Individual ConstituentsII. Business and interest

GroupsIII.Entire District

Page 38: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

II. Working with Business and Interest GroupsIntroduce legislationIntervene with agencies-EX: EPA (Environmental Protection Agency

Secure Federal Grants and Contracts

EX: Defense contracts or construction

Page 39: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

III. Entire District

Secure federal projects.Create jobs through federal grants and contracts. EX: Infrastructure--Stimulus bill

Support policies that promote district well-being

Page 40: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

I. Individual Constituents--helped by staffSolve problems by using Federal agencies

Create jobsAnswer ComplaintsProvide information

Page 41: Exam on Congress Monday May 11th Period 7 Monday May 11th Period 7.

IV. Confict: Reelection-The power to impress--”credit claiming”

Every two years, House members are forced to run. As political actors, once elected, there is a need to take as much credit as possible. As an incumbent, you need to constantly finance your campaign. At least, $20 million a month is needed. Interest groups that include corporations, unions, and think tanks play a major role in these elections.


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