Chapter 11 CONGRESS The Origin and Powers of Congress The Great Compromise created two separate, powerful legislative chambers Equal representation in Senate
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Transcript Chapter 11 CONGRESS The Origin and Powers of Congress The Great Compromise created two separate, powerful legislative chambers Equal representation in Senate
Chapter 11
CONGRESS
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The Origin and Powers of Congress
The Great Compromise created two
separate, powerful legislative chambers
Equal representation in Senate
Proportional representation in House; House must
initiate revenue-related legislation
Identical bills must be passed by both
chambers to become law
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Representation
Senators serve six-year terms; 1/3 are
elected every two years
Initially Senators selected by state legislatures;
17th Amendment changed that process to
direct elections
All 435 Representatives stand for re-election
every two years
Census every 10 years leads to
reapportionment and subsequent redistricting
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Duties of the House and Senate
Many shared powers
House alone responsible for revenue bills
and impeachment charges
Senate alone responsible for approving
treaties, presidential appointments, and
trials on the articles of impeachment
passed by the House
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Electing Congress
Congressional elections give voters a
chance to show approval or disapproval
of Congress’s performance
Incumbents usually re-elected despite
the fact polls show public dissatisfaction
with Congress’s actions
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Figure 11.1
Incumbents: Life is Good
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Figure 11.2
We Love Our Incumbents,
But Congress Itself Stinks
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Redistricting
After each census, states must re-draw
House districts
Changing district lines for partisan
advantage is gerrymandering
Computer programs make gerrymandering
easy to do
Some argue that gerrymandering increases
partisan polarization
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Name Recognition
Incumbency has advantages
Name recognition because of press
coverage of activities and speeches
Franking privileges
Twitter accounts
Casework
Campaign contributions
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Campaign Financing
Challengers must spend large sums of
money to run campaigns
Difficult to raise money
Higher-quality challengers more likely to win,
especially against vulnerable incumbents
In 2008, incumbents raised 61 percent of all
contributions to House and Senate Races
Challengers received only 23 percent
PACs prefer incumbents
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Whom Do We Elect?
Those elected not a cross-section of
American society
Most are upper-class professionals
Around 44 percent are millionaires
Women and minorities underrepresented
Seventeen women currently serve in Senate
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The Millionaire’s Club
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Compared with What?
Women in Legislatures
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Descriptive Representation
Some believe descriptive representation is
lacking
Voting Rights Act amendments in 1983
designed to encourage the drawing of
minority districts
Supreme Court ruling in Thornburg v. Gingles
(1986) also pushed states to concentrate
minorities in House districts to ensure better
representation
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Figure 11.3
Minorities in Congress
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Minorities in Congress
Efforts to draw districts favorable to
minorities being elected benefited African
Americans, but not Hispanics
Supreme Court’s ruling in Shaw v. Reno (1993)
indicated racial gerrymandering might violate
rights of whites
Later rulings said race must not be
“dominant and controlling factor” in
drawing district boundaries
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How Issues Get on the
Congressional Agenda
Formal legislative process starts with introducing a
bill in the House or Senate
Problem or issue must be identified first
Many major issues constant; others appear
suddenly
Technology changes and/or highly visible events
focus national attention on an issue
Presidential or congressional support moves issues
and related bills more rapidly
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The Dance of Legislation:
An Overview
Process of bill-writing and passage follows
specific steps (see Figure 11.4)
Process in House and Senate similar, but
House requires bills to go to Rules Committee
before going to the floor
Complexity comes with the many ways a bill
can be treated at each step
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Figure 11.4
The Legislative Process
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Committees:
The Workhorses of Congress
Real work of Congressional policymaking
happens in committees, which address
specific policy areas
Standing committees and their related
subcommittees
Joint committees
Select committees
Conference committees
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Congressional Expertise
and Scrutiny
Influence in Congress increases with
expertise and seniority
Senior member of majority party usually
committee chair
Republican leadership policy limits
committee and subcommittee chairs to
six-year terms
Democrats largely use seniority system
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Committee Action
First step in drafting legislation is information
gathering
Research by committee staff
Public hearings by committees or subcommittees
Actual debate and amendments on bills in
committee happens during markup sessions
Committee chairs need to build coalitions
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The Committee Song and Dance
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Oversight: Following
Through on Legislation
Once a bill becomes law, it is administered by a
federal agency
Congress has power of oversight to ensure bills
enacted as intended
However, magnitude of executive branch makes
oversight difficult
Several different types of oversight: hearings,
reports, and informal contacts
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Majoritarian and Pluralist
Views of Committees
Government by committee vests great power in
committees, subcommittees, and their leaders
In some ways, this enhances pluralism, since these
people are elected
Majoritarian aspect of committees comes through
debates and compromises on bills necessary to get a
bill passed
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Leaders and Followers in Congress
Party leaders in each house work to
maximize influence of their party and
ensure smooth and efficient functions
Operation of each chamber based on
rules and norms developed over the
years
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The Leadership Task in the House
Majority party leadership :
Speaker of the House
Majority leader
Majority whip
Minority party leadership:
Minority leader
Minority whip
Both parties have committees for fundraising,
strategy development, and logistics assistance
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The Leadership Task in the Senate
Constitutionally, Vice President is president of
the Senate
However, president pro tem usually serves
Real power in the Senate resides in majority
leader
Both majority and minority leader play critical
role in getting bills through congress through
bargaining and negotiations
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Clyburn Takes the Whip
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The Johnson Treatment
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Rules of Procedure
Rules in each chamber based on parliamentary procedure
Rules not always the same in House and Senate
Bill consideration in Senate requires 60 senators to vote
for unanimous consent agreement
One Senate rule allows filibusters, which can be limited by
a vote for cloture
House amendments must be germane; Senate’s do not
House bills must go to House Rules Committee before
floor debate
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Norms of Behavior
Some norms are set rules; others are
unwritten
Two most important norms:
Show respect to colleagues, even bitter
opponents
Be willing to bargain with one another
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The Legislative Environment
Decisions about votes affected by
political parties, the president,
constituents, and interest groups
Political parties and the president
majoritarian influences on policymaking
Constituents and interest groups are
pluralist influences on policymaking
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Political Parties
Parties strong force in legislative process by
controlling:
Committee appointments
Consideration of a legislator’s bills or
amendments
Appointments to leadership positions
Parties also showcase differences in
ideologies
Majoritarianism at work after 2008 election
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Figure 11.5
Rising
Partisanship
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The President
Presidents tend to act as though they are
speaking for the majority
Public expectations for the presidency grew in
the 20th century
White House openly involved in crafting
legislation
However, Congress still in charge of
legislation
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Constituents
The people in a legislator’s district or
state crucial to decision-making process
Legislators must consider what voters want
Constituent influence contributes to
pluralism because of the geographic
basis of representation
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Interest Groups
Interest groups prime example of
pluralist politics
Legislators pay attention to interest
groups because they represent voters
Lobbyists also provide key information
and contributions
Access is the first step towards influence
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The Dilemma of Representation
What a legislator’s constituents want is not
always what the majority in the nation want
After working in Washington all week,
legislators fly home to meet with constituents
However, sometimes hard to act on
knowledge gained from constituents
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Constituents Strike Back
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Trustees or Delegates?
Must members of Congress vote the way
their district prefers, even if it goes
against their conscience or national
interests?
Trustees vote their conscience
Delegates vote their district or state
Opinions of constituents not always
clear
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Pluralism, Majoritarianism,
and Democracy
Voting as delegates supports pluralistic
policymaking
Majoritarian policymaking relies on
involvement of political parties
Voting as a trustee not necessarily
majoritarian
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Parliamentary Government
In parliamentary system, chief executive
is leader of party with a majority
In Great Britain, voters only vote for their
member of Parliament
Voters influence policymaking by their party
choice
With multiple parties, sometimes must form
ruling coalition
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Parliamentary Government
In this system, government power highly
concentrated in legislature
No separation of governmental power
Usually have only one house, or a very weak second
house
Usually no court that can invalidate acts of
parliament
A very majoritarian form of government
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Politics of Global Change:
Creating a Legislature
New Iraqi government based on proportional
representation
Each province has a multimember district
Government is federal and has a unicameral
legislature
Representatives vote for presidential council, prime
minister, and cabinet
Disputes mean Iraqi parliament a work in progress
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Pluralism Versus Majoritarianism in Congress
U.S. Congress criticized for being too
pluralist
Despite public concern about deficit,
legislators put earmarks in appropriations bills
Democrats recently reformed earmark process
for greater transparency
Growing partisanship means greater
majoritarianism
So, modern Congress characterized by both
pluralism and majoritarianism
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Earmark Question Mark
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