THE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter Six, Section One
Advertisements

Chapter 6 Congress.
The Legislative Branch
6.1 Organization of Congress. A Bicameral Legislature The Great Compromise established Congress as a two-part or bicameral bodyThe Great Compromise established.
Warm Up: Review for Quiz. Collect HW After Quiz: What are some strategies for a large group to divide up a lot of work?
Foundations of United States Citizenship Lesson 5, Chapter 61 U.S. National Government.
Congress Government Chapter 6.
Section1. A Bicameral Legislature The Framers wanted to establish a Congressional voting body, but one of the concerns at the Constitutional Convention.
Chapter 6.1 How Congress is Organized. Terms of Congress The Framers of the U.S. Constitution intended the legislative branch to be the most powerful.
Ch. 6 Congress at Work. Ch. 6, Section 1: Organization of Congress Essential Questions – What are the terms and sessions of Congress? – How is congressional.
Legislative Branch of the Federal Government.  Please answer the following questions: Yes, write the question!!!!  1. How many voting members are there.
Copy the question, use the maps on pages to answer; Please have planner out and on your table. 1)According to the 2000 map, which states gained.
Section 1- How Congress is organized?. How Congress is Organized The House 435 members, 2 year terms of office. Initiates all revenue bills, more influential.
Do Now pg Name 3 facts about the president’s job.
 Bicameral Legislature  Two houses  Upper house  Senate  2 members from each state  Lower house  House of Representatives  Based on population.
Foundations of United States Citizenship Lesson 5, Chapter 61 U.S. National Government.
Congress Who’s Leading. Reelection and Incumbency Advantage Incumbents=those who are in office Why are incumbents usually reelected? –Incumbents find.
The Legislative Branch How Congress is Organized.
Unit Two – The Legislative Branch The First Quiz Review!
Lesson 7.  The foundation of the Legislative Branch is found in Article I of the U.S. Constitution.  Its main duty is to make the laws of the United.
The Structure of Congress Chapter 5.1. AM Take out your homework and write your name on a note card. Answer the following questions using your notes.
Chapter 6, Section 1 How Congress Is Organized. Main Idea In Congress, members of each party select their own leaders and work mainly in committees to.
How Congress is Organized. “Separation of Powers” The 3 “branches” of government are: (LEJ) – Legislative Branch – make the laws – Executive Branch –
The Legislative Branch. How Congress is Organized.
Legislative Branch of the Federal Government.  535 is the magic number (This is the total membership in the U.S. Congress.)  The framers intended to.
FYI: LEGISLATIVE BRANCH CHAPTER 6/SECTION 1 CONT’.
Civics Chapter 6 Sections 1 & 2. How Congress Is Organized Article I Article I Legislative Branch most powerful Legislative Branch most powerful Term.
Over the years, Congress has grown, making it very difficult to conduct congressional business. Therefore, rules have been established in both Houses.
Bell-ringer: 1. Which state gained the most representatives following the 2010 census? 2. What happened to most states’ number of representatives following.
How Congress Works Goal 2. Congressional Rules -Developed to help Congress operate -House has more rules than Senate why??? -Parliamentary Procedures.
Over the years, Congress has grown, making it very difficult to conduct congressional business. Therefore, rules have been established in both Houses.
Chapter 5 Section 2 (pgs ) How Congress is Organized
Friday, February 24th Notes today: How Congress is Organized
How Congress is Organized
6.1 Organization of Congress
How Congress is Organized
Analyzing the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches
Structure of Congress – Goal 2 – Ch 6
The Legislative Branch
How Congress is Organized
The Legislative Branch
The Legislative Branch
How Congress is Organized
How Congress is Organized
Section 1- How Congress is organized?
Legislative Branch “Congress”.
Random Fact of the Day Did you know members of Congress are the highest paid legislatures in the world? The average member of Congress makes 200+ thousand.
Organization and Powers of Congress
APK: Representation In order for someone to accurately represent you they must look just like you. Agree Disagree.
Warmup Why do we need laws?
How Congress is Organized
Chapter 6 – The Legislative Branch
Legislative Branch “Congress”.
Chapter 5 Section 2 (pgs ) How Congress is Organized
How Congress is Organized
How Congress Is Organized?
How Congress is Organized
How Congress is Organized
Unit 4: Lecture 1: Chapter 14 The Organizational Structure of Congress
How Congress is Organized
How Congress Works (Congress #2).
Legislative Branch “Congress”.
The Legislative Branch
The Legislative branch
Warm-Up (37L) – What do we already know/ remember?
The Legislative Branch
U.S. Congress.
How Congress is Organized
How Congress is Organized
Gerrymandering The first “gerrymander” was drawn on a map and signed into law on February 11,  Elbridge Gerry, then governor of Massachusetts, signed.
Presentation transcript:

THE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH CHAPTER 6 THE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH

Section 1 – how congress is organized

Terms of Congress The Framers of the U.S. Constitution intended the LEGISLATIVE branch to be the most POWERFUL branch.

Each term starts January 3 of odd-numbered years and lasts TWO years Each term starts January 3 of odd-numbered years and lasts TWO years. Each term has two SESSIONS.

Congress holds special sessions in times of CRISIS. A JOINT session occurs when BOTH houses meet together, such as for the PRESIDENT’S State of the Union address.

A Bicameral Legislature The Great Compromise established Congress as a two-part, or bicameral, body.

The House of Representatives The House of Representatives has 435 VOTING members, allotted to the states by POPULATION. After each census, or population count taken by the Census Bureau, Congress ADJUSTS the number of representatives given to each STATE.

House members focus on the CONCERNS of their district. States are divided into DISTRICTS, with one representative elected from each district. The states draw districts to include ROUGHLY the same NUMBER of constituents, or people represented. Some abuse the process by drawing a GERRYMANDER, or oddly shaped district designed to increase the voting strength of a PARTICULAR group. House members focus on the CONCERNS of their district.

The Senate The Senate has 100 members – two from each state. Senators represent their ENTIRE states. They serve six-year terms. Elections are STAGGERED to ensure some stability.

Congressional Leaders In both houses, the political party to which more than half the members belong is the MAJORITY party. The other party is the MINORITY party. PARTY members choose their leaders at the beginning of each TERM.

Speaker of the House The Speaker of the House is the most POWERFUL leader in the House of Representatives. The Speaker always belongs to the MAJORITY party.

The Speaker is in charge of floor DEBATES and INFLUENCES most House business. If something happened to the president and vice president, the SPEAKER would become PRESIDENT.

Other Leadership Positions The leader of the Senate is technically the VICE PRESIDENT, who rarely attends and votes only in case of a TIE. The person who actually acts as chairperson is the president PRO TEMPORE. The majority party fills this mostly CEREMONIAL position. Powerful FLOOR leaders try to make sure the laws Congress passes are in the best interest of their own PARTY. They speak for their parties on the issues and try to SWAY votes. Party “WHIPS” help by keeping track of where their party members stand on issues and ROUNDING them up for KEY votes.

Committees: Little Legislatures The DETAILED work of lawmaking is done in committees. Each house has permanent STANDING committees that continue their work from session to session. Most are divided into smaller subcommittees that deal with SPECIALIZED issues.

JOINT committees include members of BOTH houses. Both houses also have select committees that are created to do a special job for a LIMITED period. They DISBAND after completing their task. JOINT committees include members of BOTH houses. TEMPORARY conference committees help the House and Senate agree on the details of a PROPOSED law.

Members of Congress try to get ASSIGNED to important committees that affect the people who ELECTED them. Party LEADERS make committee assignments based on members’ preferences, expertise, party loyalty, and seniority, or years of service. Members with the most SENIORITY usually get the PREFERRED committee spots. CHAIRPERSONS of standing committees are the most POWERFUL members of Congress. The most SENIOR members from the MAJORITY party traditionally become chairpersons.