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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