Transcript Congress

Congress
The legislative branch
Members represent their constituents
• Constituency-the district comprising the area which
an official is elected, but this difficult for a
congressman because of many demands of the
people
▫ A congressman also sees his job in 3 ways:
 Delegate-acting on the express preference of their
constituents (nearly impossible)
 Trustee-making decisions on what he thinks best (limits
that congressman to focus on high profile issues and
opens door to special interests)
 Partisan-loyalty to the party (limits their service to the
constituents)
The job is difficult
• On any given day, a
member is expected to
make decisions on any
number of issues, some of
which he/she may not be
educated about
• Many bills can be lengthy
(Clinton’s health reform
package was 1300 pages
long), which increases the
reliance on the party and
interest groups to decipher
them
• But…congressmen are taken care of
▫ They earn $174,000/year
▫ They receive a spending allowance,
office, office staff, travel allowance,
health care, private restaurant,
private gyms
• Congress is sometimes considered a
millionaires club, but many are
elitists are either lawyers or
businessmen, and mostly male and
white
• Franking privileges -free
postage, to help congressmen keep
in touch with constituents
Getting in
• Who runs-typically candidates are high profile members
of that state who have managed to raise enough money
to attract voters and have good connections
• Once in, however, you will stay in because of a stacked
deck called incumbency (average reelection rate is 95%)
▫ The advantages of being the incumbent
Name recognition
Campaign war chest (leads to the constant campaign)
Patronage-favors for supporters
Pork barrel spending (earmarking)-money given to local
projects that may or may not be needed
http://www.cagw.org/site/PageServer?pagename=reports_pi
gbook2008
 Gerrymandering-the drawing of district lines to the advantage
of the majority party in the state
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 “one person, one vote”- Baker v. Carr 1962; Wesberry v. Sanders
1964 congressional districting
House of Representatives
• 435 Members (seats are
reapportioned every 10 years)
• 2 year terms (all 435 up for
reelection)
• Have to be 25, citizenship for 7
years and resident of state they
represent
• Must initiate all revenue bills
and pass articles of
impeachment
• Less prestigious, more
centralized turnover is small
• Seniority is important and
strict rules on debate and
amendments
House Membership of 113th Congress
• 201 Democrats
• 233 Republicans
▫ 6 nonvoting members
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Average Age: 56
78 women
19% are minorities
84 Veterans
Lawyers: 128
House Leadership
• Speaker of the House: John Boehner
▫ Most powerful person in the
House
▫ Traditionally the oldest member
of majority party
▫ Assigns committee memberships
(especially Rules Committee)
▫ Assigns bills to committees
▫ 2nd in line to presidency
▫ What bills come to the floor
• Institutional task is to move
▫ Recognizes speakers on floor
legislation through the House
▫ Controls material benefits
• Also must ensure passage of
her party’s measures
Speaker of the
House
Sam Rayburn
Dem-Tx.
1941-1947
1949-1953
1955-1961
“I didn’t serve under
anyone. I served with
eight presidents.”
House Leadership
• Majority Leader-schedule bills
and seek support of bills
▫ Eric Cantor
He is assisted by the whips
• Minority Leader-tries to block
majority party’s legislation
▫ Nancy Pelosi
 Also assisted by minority
whips
The Senate
• 100 members (2 per state)
• 6 year terms
• Have to be 30, 9 year citizen and
a resident in the state you
represent
• Senate provides “advice and
consent” to the president and
holds the impeachment trial
• Senate is seen as more
prestigious, leadership is less
decentralized and seniority less
important
• Senate has unlimited debates
which can lead to filibusters
(longest-24 hours, 18 minutes)
Senate Membership of 113th Congress
• 53 Democrats, 45
Republicans, 2
independents (caucus
with Democrats)
• Average Age: 62
• Gender: 20 women
• 95% of Senate is white
• Lawyers: 45
• 18 Veterans
Senate Leadership
• President of the Senate
 Vice-President of US
 Joseph Biden-breaks ties
▫ President Pro Tempore
• Senate Majority Leader
▫ Harry Reid
 Majority whips
• Senate Minority Leader
▫ Mitch McConnell
 Minority whips
Committees
“Outside of traffic, there is nothing that has held this country back as
much as committees.”
“Congress in session is Congress on exhibition, whilst Congress in its
committee rooms is Congress at work.”--Wilson
• The real work of Congress done in committees
• They serve as a filtering process to ensure best bill is put
forward
• Committees hold hearing to investigate problems and
possible wrongdoings by the executive branch-a.k.a.
OVERSIGHT
• They control the congressional agenda and guide the
legislative process
• Allows members to specialize and become experts, but also
leads to corruption and undue influence from special
interests
4 Types of Committees
• Standing committees-permanent committees that
propose and write legislation 20 in the House, 17 in
Senate
• Select committee-temporary committees designed to
investigate issues not within the jurisdiction of a
standing committee (Watergate, Iran-Contra, 9/11)
• Joint committees-made up of members from both
houses and gather information
• Conference committee-made up of members of both
house and work to compromise on bills already passed
Power Committees
• House
▫ Rules-set rules for debate
▫ Appropriations-PORK
▫ Ways and Means-taxes
▫ Budget
▫ Armed Services
▫ Foreign Affairs
• Senate
▫ Foreign Relations
▫ Finance
▫ Appropriations
▫ Budget
▫ Armed Services
▫ Judiciary
• Being on the right
committees help with
▫ Reelection-PACs and
$$$$
▫ Shape public policyreport back home
▫ Increasing influence in
Congress
• Committee membership
decided by party
leadership, but legislators
are typically put on
committees that represent
their district needs,
matches their interests or
specialty, or if the member
comes from a “safe” district
Committees and subcommittees
• Membership and chairman of the committees
determined by seniority and party membership (the
chair of each committee is a member of the majority
party and committees are proportional to whole house)
• Chairs of committees and subcommittees wield a lot of
influence over proposed legislation
• Subcommittees are important because it allows for
younger members to be in on important legislation, each
subcommittee operates semi-independently of parent
committee and the shear number of them contributes to
gridlock
Informal Organizations
• Internal interest groups made up of congressional
members that share similar interests or background and
seek to advance the interests of the group
▫ Black Caucus, Democratic Study Group, Hispanic Caucus,
Steel Caucus, Mushroom Caucus, Blue Dog Caucus, Sudan
Caucus, Congressional Boating Caucus
• Staff members are second in importance to committees
and serve as conduits for interest groups
▫ Handle constituency requests
▫ Provide analysis and information on bills
Last thoughts-Congress vs. President
• Gridlock is good—no gridlock bad
▫ Different constituencies and view (President has a
global perspective, Congress local)
▫ Internal structure leads to conflict because of
committees
▫ Different levels of expertise and information
 Most congressmen are lawyers and lack expertise on
most subjects
▫ Differing timetables
 House elected every 2 years (represent passions of the
people) so constantly campaigning and tend to ignore
big issues
 Senators have 6 years to spend on issues and have
more freedom to what it wants (they cool the passions
of the people)