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Unit Three: Institutions of Government

Explore the evolution of the US Congress, from its founding to the present day, and learn about the differences between the House of Representatives and the Senate. Understand the impact of incumbency and party affiliation on members of Congress and the role they play in representing their constituents.

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Unit Three: Institutions of Government

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  1. Unit Three:Institutions of Government Chapter 13: Congress

  2. America’s “First Branch” • Power to write laws • Power of the purse • Can override presidential veto • Oversees executive agencies • Compared to most other countries • Very strong • Can exercise power independently

  3. Congress vs. parliament

  4. Evolution of Congress • Founding Fathers • Keep power from being concentrated • Inhibit rule by mob-mentality majority • Keep states happy • Bicameral legislature • Senate for the states • New Jersey Plan • Low-population (small) states • House for the people • Virginia Plan • Highly populated (large) states • Great Compromise • Connecticut Plan • Use BOTH plans

  5. Evolution of congress • Since the mid-20th century • Decentralized decision making • Increase the power of the individual members

  6. Differences between the house and the senate • The House • Bigger (435 members) • Wants to remain powerful • Members gain power at expense of the House • The House gains power at the expense of members

  7. Differences between the house and the senate • The Senate • Smaller (100 members) • Does not control the amount of debate • Allows the FILIBUSTER • **Initially conceived as a way to ensure minority opinions were heard and understood** • Delay action on a specific motion

  8. Differences between the house and the senate • The Senate • Does not control amount of time on debate • Allows the Filibuster • Old Rules • Stand on Senate floor • Continue to speak • **New Rules** • “Virtual filibuster” • Does not have to be on the Senate floor • Conducted “in absentia” • “Invisible filibuster” • Requires 41 senators to simply say, “We’re going to filibuster.”

  9. Differences between the house and the senate • The Senate • Does not control amount of time on debate • Allows the Filibuster • Regulated by CLOTURE • 1917 – 2/3 of all elected senators to end filibuster • 1975 – 3/5 of all elected senators to end filibuster • Originally elected by state legislatures • Millionaires’ Club • Seventeenth Amendment – popular election of senators

  10. Who is in congress? • Demographics • White • Middle-aged • Male • Protestant • Lawyer • GRADUALLY changing

  11. Who is in congress? • Incumbency • 19th Century • One term • Not a full time job • Travel to DC was difficult • DC was a fetid swamp • Didn’t pay well

  12. Who is in congress? • Incumbency • 1950s and beyond • Career politicians • Many constituents began to think congressmen were becoming “out of touch” • Drive to impose term limits • Declared unconstitutional • Would need an amendment

  13. Who is in congress? • Incumbency • Marginal Districts • Close elections • Winner with less than 55% • Safe Districts • Blow-out elections • Victory with 55% or more • Steady INCREASE since the 50s • Voters are more likely to vote for the person instead of the party than before • Familiar name gets elected • Credit given to incumbent for government programs in district

  14. Who is in congress? • Incumbency • How party affects incumbents • The majority party in each state legislature draws the congressional districts • In 1990 • Anti-incumbency feelings hurt Dems • Redistricting by Republicans hurt Dems • South going republican hurt Dems • Conservative Coalition • Conservative Dems from the South join with Northern Reps • As Southern Republicans win more and more, CC dies out

  15. Who is in congress? • Incumbency** • How party affects incumbents • The majority party in each state legislature draws the congressional districts • In 2000 • Seems to favor Republicans • Especially in • PA • Ohio • Florida • Michigan “Seats to Votes Ratios in the United States” Michael P. McDonald George Mason University

  16. Who is in congress? • Incumbency** • 2010 Election and Redistricting • Seems to solidify Republican hold in House of Representatives “The Lasting Impact of the 2010 Election: Redistricting Cementing Republican House Majority” By: David Daven Thursday October 25, 2012 1:17 pm

  17. What Should I Do? – Roles** • Delegate Role • Vote the way the majority of my CONSTITUENCY wants • Trustee Role . • Vote the way I think is best for you and the country … “TRUST ME”

  18. What Should I Do? – Roles** • Politico Role • Vote whatever • way is best for getting me • re-elected • Partisan Role • Vote the way my political party wants

  19. Do members represent their constituents? • FAQs: • Should they vote as their constituents want? • Should they vote according to their own beliefs? • Should they vote a certain way because of interest group or party pressure?

  20. Do members represent their constituents? • Representational View • Vote to please their constituents (Delegate) • To do this constituent views must be • Clear • United • Something that grabs their attention • Votes can be “hidden” • Voice Votes • Standing Votes • Only some are roll call votes

  21. Do members represent their constituents? • Representational View • Correlation on voting and constituency view • STRONG correlation on Civil Rights Issues • Moderate correlation on Social Welfare Issues • Weak or no correlation on Foreign Policy Issues • What if the constituency view is unclear? • Often in a divided district (marginal district?) • GET OUT OF TOWN and avoid the vote!

  22. Do members represent their constituents? • Organizational View • Cues from respected colleagues within the party • With close ideological feeling • When the constituent views are not in play • How to vote? • If both liberals and conservatives like it = vote yes • If liberals and conservatives are divided = vote with a party member who is ideologically like you • If it is an issue important to your state = look to fellow representatives from your state

  23. Do members represent their constituents? • Attitudinal View • Democrats are consistently liberal • Republicans are consistently conservative • Senators are more extreme than Representatives • Phases of the Senate • 50s – 60s = conservative • 60s – 70s = liberal • 70s – 80s = conservative • Democrats are more divided • Conservative Coalition • Southern Democrats join with Northern Republicans • New South (republican) = death of the “coalition”

  24. Civility in congress • More sharply divided ideologically than they once were • Congress is more polarized than populous • Changes • Attitudinal voting on the rise • Organizational voting drops with party weakness • Members do not get along (loss of civility) • Challenge each other • Investigate each other • Denounce each other

  25. Parties and Caucuses in Congress – the Senate • Party organization of the Senate • Majority party chooses the PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE • (pro tempore is Latin for “for the time”) • Presiding officer if the Vice President is absent (vice president is President of the Senate) • Honorific post

  26. Parties and Caucuses in Congress – the Senate • Party organization of the Senate • Majority also chooses: • Majority leader • The REAL POWER in the Senate • Schedules the business of the Senate • Majority whip • Informs majority leader of party members’ attitudes • Gets members out to vote!

  27. Parties and Caucuses in Congress – the Senate • The minority Party selects • Minority leader • Minority whip • Key to party organization and power is in ASSIGNING SENATORS TO SPECIFIC COMMITTEES • Democrats = Steering Committee • Republicans = the Committee on Committees

  28. Parties and Caucuses in Congress – the House • Leadership carries more power in the House than in the Senate • Size means individuals must be restricted on debate time • Size means schedule must be in place and followed

  29. Parties and Caucuses in Congress – the House • The Speaker of the House • MOST important position • Elected from the majority party • Speaker of the House, as PRESIDENT of the House is expected to benon-partisan • Speaker of the House, as PARTY LEADER is expected to be highly partisan • Decides who can speak on the floor • Decides if a motion is relevant • Assigns new bills to committees • Influences which bills come up for passage vote

  30. Parties and Caucuses in Congress – the House • Floor Leaders • One from each party • They are next in line for Speaker of the House • They have whips in the House, too!

  31. Parties and Caucuses in Congress • Strength of Party Structures • Ability of leaders to get party members to vote as a bloc • Vote on rules and structure is relatively easy • Vote on legislation is much more difficult! • Votes are normally known ahead of time

  32. Parties and Caucuses in Congress • Party Unity • Party Polarization • One party votes opposite of the other party – everything along party lines! • Increasingly, adversarial roles make polarization a modern issue as well as a historic issue • Reflects a split (chasm???) between party ideologies • It is NOT reflective of society • Unimodal society • Bimodal Congress

  33. Parties and Caucuses in Congress • Reasons for Party Polarization • District Boundaries • Not competitive • Only the primary really matters • Mostly ideologues vote in primaries • Ideologues mostly vote for extremists

  34. Parties and Caucuses in Congress • What is a Congressional Caucus?** • Loose association • Congressmen from either chamber • United by a common interest or cause More to come!

  35. How a bill becomes a law • Procedures favor opponents of a bill • To get a bill passed into law: • Fast track it based on popular enthusiasm • Slowly build a coalition

  36. How a bill becomes a law • Introducing a Bill • May be done by any member of Congress • House • Hand it to the clerk • Drop it in a “suggestion” box  Hopper! • Senate • Be recognized by presiding officer • Announce it on the floor

  37. How a bill becomes a law • Bills get • Legislative number • Printed up • Within ONE Congressional session to be passed (a SESSION is the two-year span between elections of Representatives.) • President • May propose a law to a Congressman • MAY NOT introduce it in Congress

  38. How a bill becomes a law • Study by Committee • Referred to a committee by • Speaker of the House • Presiding officer of the Senate • Which committee? • Rules dictate direction • Sometimes overlap exists and leaders make the final decision

  39. How a bill becomes a law • Revenue Bills • MUST start in the House • Senate may amend AFTER House acts • House Ways and Means Committee • Handles tax bills • VERY POWERFUL • Most bills die in committee • Introduced to get publicity • Introduced to please constituency

  40. How a bill becomes a law • Assigned to subcommittee • Actions of (sub) committee hearings • Witnesses appear • Evidence is studied • Questions are asked • Purposes of (sub) committee hearings • To better inform Congressmen • Permit interest groups to speak out • Build public support (or hostility?)

  41. How a bill becomes a law • After the hearings • Revisions made (must be approved by a majority of the house) • Additions made (must be approved by a majority of the house) • If majority approves, bill is reported favorably to House or Senate • With explanation of why it’s favored • With why the additions were made • With dissenting opinions

  42. How a bill becomes a law • House can order a DISCHARGE PETITION • If there is a threat that the committee will stall or kill bill • Bring it to the floor • Needs 218 members to sign petition

  43. How a bill becomes a law • Placed on the “calendar” • House of Reps • Rules Committee • Speaker of House presides • Sets the RULE • Restrictive or Closed Rule • Limit debate • Only as it came from committee • Open Rule • Looser debate • Amendments from the floor allowed • Can offer favorable “rules” in exchange for subtle changes in the bill

  44. How a bill becomes a law • Placed on the Calendar • Senate • Bills considered in any order • At any time • When the majority chooses • Practice says majority leader and minority leader discuss ahead of time

  45. How a bill becomes a law • Debate • After introduction from the calendar • House • Committee of the Whole • Who? • Everyone present • At least 100 members present • Actions • Debate • Amend • Decide final shape • Quorum • At least half of the membership (218) • Can pass the law

  46. How a bill becomes a law • Debate • After introduction from the calendar • Senate • No RULES COMMITTEE • Allows FILIBUSTER • Broken by Cloture Resolution • 60% • EASIER to filibuster with “double tracking” • Table the filibustered bill • Move to next one • Don’t have to talk round the clock! • Allows Riders

  47. How a bill becomes a law • Voting • Voice vote • Both houses • Raise hand, sayyea or nay • Roll-call vote • Responding with names • House • Electronic • Old fashioned calling • Senate • Calling only • No electronic

  48. How a bill becomes a law • Voting • Division Vote • Stand up • House only • Teller Vote • House only • If Division or voice vote fail • Walk between “tellers” who tally votes • All yeas first • All nays second

  49. How a bill becomes a law • IF the bill passes, but is not identical • Conference committee formed • If voted to form by each house • Members picked by chairs of the committees handling the issue • Minority and majority must be represented • Each delegation (House and Senate) must approve changes by a majority

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