Congress Unit Vocabulary Review
Parts of Congress bicameral legislature: divided into 2 houses; federal gov. and most states (except NE) have it Senate: 2 per state; 100 total; V.P.—heads it, breaks a tie vote; protects elite interests; less disciplined House of Reps.: the “voice of the people”; 435 members; more institutionalized and hierarchical
Leaders Speaker of the House: mandated by the Const.; chosen by the majority party Majority ldr.: in the House or Senate—chosen by the party with more members; chief ally of the Speaker Minority ldr.: in the House or Senate—chosen by the party with fewer members whips: work with min. and maj. leaders to count votes and get more support
Types of Committees select: appointed for a specific purpose joint: made up of both House and Senate members; a few subject matters discussed conference: works out compromise between different versions of a bill standing: permanent ones that handle legislation House Rules: unique institution--reviews all bills before going to the House; decides if bills are heard
representation and the people descriptive: members who represent their constituents by mirroring their personal and political characteristics substantive: members representing the interests of groups incumbents: already hold office; run for reelection constituents: voter in a district of an elected official; authorizes them to make decisions
Laws and Bills bill: proposed law; drafted in legal language “marked up” bills: when they are changed, amended, and debated in committee legislative oversight: Congress monitors the bureaucracy and its policy administration lobbying: communication by someone other than a citizen—to influence government decisions
Senate debates filibuster: opponents of a piece of legislation try to talk a bill to death; unlimited debate on it cloture: to stop a filibuster—requiring 60 votes to accomplish
Other terms credit claiming: in order to get reelected; taking credit for increased spending in their state and helping constituents casework: activities of members that help their constituents as individuals caucus: a group of members who share some interest or characteristic
Other terms (cont.) seniority system: simple rule for selecting committee chairs—person serving the longest and whose party controlled the House or Senate; in effect until the 1970s committee chairs: elected by the committee members; provide leadership of activities gerrymandering: redrawing district lines to favor one party over another
Pork Barrel list of federal projects, grants and contracts available to places in a congressional district; often excessive spending