Institutions of American Government Module 4.1: Congress Section 7: Committee Classification.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What happens in Congress.  Jan 3 rd  House of Reps. has to reorganize because all seats were up for election. ◦ No sworn in members ◦ No rules ◦ No.
Advertisements

Congress: Powers, Leadership, and Structure
Chapter 7 Congress. Constitutional Powers All powers given to Congress can be found in Article I, Section 8 –Lay and collect taxes –Borrow money –Regulate.
Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.
The General Assembly: Georgia’s Legislative Branch
Georgia’s Legislative Branch:
How Congress is Organized to Make Policy Chapter 12 pp
Congress: The People’s Branch
Congress Convenes Congress convenes every two years—on January 3 of every odd-numbered year. The House has formal organizational meetings at the beginning.
A group of representatives or senators assigned to become experts in a particular policy area Each rep or senator sits on more than one committee Leadership.
Institutions of American Government
123 Go To Section: 4 Congress At Work Law and Government Chapter 12 Learning Objectives and Text Notes.
The Organization of Congress Institutions of Government #2.
How a Bill Becomes Law Chapter 7.  A.Types of Bills and Resolutions 1. Bills — these are proposed laws presented to Congress. Public bills apply to the.
Chapter 12 Congress in Action.
Three Branches of Government. Section 1 The Legislative Branch.
{ Date: October 16, 2013 Topic: Party Leadership and Committees in Congress. Aim: How does party leadership and committees play key roles in the legislative.
Chapters – “The United States Congress”. THREE Types of Congressional Committees 1. * Standing Committees 2. Select / Special Committees 3. Joint.
Congressional Committees
Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc.Slide 1 Chapter 12, Section 2 Objectives 1.Explain how standing committees function. 2.Describe the responsibilities.
The Organization of Legislative Bodies Centralization 2: Leadership in the Texas Legislature.
123 Go To Section: 4 Congress Convenes Chapter 12, Section Congress convenes every two years—on January 3 of every odd-numbered year.
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.
Unit 4 Review Congress.  The People’s Influence Constituents’ views (Delegate) Party Views (Partisan) Personal Views (Trustee)  Congress in the Constitution.
 Standing Committees  Subcommittees  Select or special committees  Joint Committee  Conference Committee.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Congress part 3.
{ Date: October 16, 2012 Topic: Party Leadership and Committees in Congress. Aim: How does party leadership and committees play key roles in the legislative.
Institutions of American Government Module 4.1: Congress Section 5: Congressional Leadership.
HOW A BILL BECOMES A LAW.
A group of representatives or senators assigned to become experts in a particular policy area Each rep or senator sits on more than one committee Leadership.
Committees  What are committees? Groups of Congress people assigned to groups of specific areas of expertise.
The Texas Legislature.
The Legislative Process How Congress Works. Helping Constituents As a lawmaker- sponsoring bills that benefit constituents. Committee work- supporting.
Leadership in Congress and the Committee System. House of Representatives Speaker of the House 1. Presides over the House. 2. Appoints select committees.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 12 Congress in Action.
Institutions of American Government Module 4.1: Congress Section 6: Committee Assignment.
.  The House o 435 members, 2 year terms of office. o Initiates all revenue bills, more influential on budget. o Limited debates.  The Senate o 100.
The Legislative Branch: Committees and Leadership Unit 5: The Legislative Branch.
By: Lindsay Hoerig, Matt Buchanan, Taha Taha. Vocab Part 1  Gerrymandering - Like process by which the majority party in each state legislation redraws.
Standing Committees Much of Congressional work is done in committee. The practice of committees being utilized to consider Congressional legislation dates.
CONGRESS: STRUCTURE & ORGANIZATION Unit 3 Part 3.
FYI: LEGISLATIVE BRANCH CHAPTER 6/SECTION 1 CONT’.
Legislative Branch A quick review of what you should have learned from all the reading!
T HE J OB OF A L EGISLATOR The work of Washington.
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 12 Congress in Action.
The Committee System “Congress in Committee is Congress at work” - Woodrow Wilson (1888)
How Congress Works Goal 2. Congressional Rules -Developed to help Congress operate -House has more rules than Senate why??? -Parliamentary Procedures.
Date: March 1, 2016 Topic: Party Leadership and Committees in Congress. Aim: How does party leadership and committees play key roles in the legislative.
Chapter 5 Section 3 Mr. Gordon.
Congressional Committees
How a Bill Becomes a Law The Journey of a Bill.
Congress and the Committees System
How a Bill Becomes A Law.
Congress: Powers, Leadership, and Structure
Leadership Positions & Committees in the Legislative Branch
Congress in Action Unit 2.
Leadership House Senate Speaker Majority/Minority Leader
Bell ringer #2 When making a decision, any decision, is it best to get input from others(Trustee Theory) or just make the decision with what you know(Delegate.
The Organization of Legislative Bodies
How Congress is Organized
The Committee System Standing committees
S E C T I O N 1 Congress Organizes
Congressional Committees
Congress in Action Ch. 12.
Bell ringer #2 When making a decision, any decision, is it best to get input from others(Trustee Theory) or just make the decision with what you know(Delegate.
Congress.
Chapter 12 Notes.
Congressional Committees
4-4: Organization of Congress
Congress has impeached and removed eight judges from the bench since Why does Congress need this impeachment power over judges?
Presentation transcript:

Institutions of American Government Module 4.1: Congress Section 7: Committee Classification

Lesson Objectives Identify Standing committee membership of select Representatives and Senators Classify committee membership according to their function Classify committees according to their structure and rules Describe Advantages and Disadvantages of the committee system

Decentralization –Diffusion of power across an entire legislative body –Sometimes called the ‘democratic’ tendency –Focus on committees and subcommittees

Question #6 Which of the following best describes the committee membership requirement of members of the US House of Representatives? a.Every member must serve on at least one standing committee b.Every member must serve on at least two standing committees, unless they sit on the Rules Committee, the Steering Committee or the Policy Committee c.Every member must serve on at least two standing committees, unless they are floor leaders d.Every member must serve on at least two standing committees unless they serve on the Rules Committee, the Ways and Means Committee, or the Appropriations Committee

Types of Committees: By Class of Legislation Procedural –Matters inside the Chamber Rules of Debate Scheduling Committee assignment Conduct of legislators Substantive –Matters outside the Chamber Powers outlined in Article 1 Section 8 –Taxation –Federal programs –regulation Oversight –Matters related to government affairs Investigation of the executive branch impeachment Appointment confirmation

Question #9 The Senate Government Affairs Committee is an example of what kind of Committee? a.Procedural b.Substantive c.Oversight d.Select

Question #5 What is the difference between a procedural committee and a substantive committee? a.A procedural committee deals with the operation of the chamber itself, while a substantive committee deals with matters of public policy b.A procedural committee deals with policy procedures, while a substantive committee deals with the substance of public policy c.A procedural committee directs the conduct of house members, while a substantive committee deals with the conduct of the executive branch d.A procedural committee deals with methods of enacting legislation, while substantive committees deal with policy targets

Question #3 In the Texas House of Representatives, which committee assumes the role of the Rules Committee? a.The Schedule Committee b.The Texas Legislative Council c.The Calendars Committee d.The Discharge Committee

Types of Committees: By Composition & Rules Standing –Areas of permanent legislative interest –E.g. House Appropriations, Senate Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs Select (called Special in the TX Leg.) –Formed in response to a specific issue –E.g. House Committee on Impeachment, Senate Subcommittee on Armed Services Materiel Realignment Joint –Membership includes both House and Senate Members –Usually a select committee –Most common joint committee: Conference committees –TX Leg. Includes a standing joint committee: The Legislative Budget Board Interim –Any committee that meets outside the regular legislative session –More common in TX Leg. than in the US Congress The Committee of the Whole –Composed of the entire chamber

Question #4 The person(s) usually responsible for scheduling floor action in the US House of representatives is a.the Speaker b.the majority and minority leaders c.the Calendars Committee d.the Rules Committee

Question #7 Which of the following is a legislative committee comprised of members of both houses? a.conference committee b.oversight committee c.ways and means committee d.finance committee

Question #8 What makes the Legislative Budget Board unique in committee government? a.The LBB is a select joint committee b.The LBB is a standing joint committee c.The LBB is a select standing committee d.The LBB is a select interim committee

Advantages of Committees Expertise –Committee members become experts in a policy area –Seniority system allows members to gain familiarity with policy areas Division of labor –Multiple measures can be considered at once Interest –Allows legislators to sit on committees that deal with issues of interest to their constituents Open Forum –Operates as a ‘safety valve’ for public debate and controversy since committees cannot enact legislation by themselves Access –Citizens may more easily persuade a standing or select committee than the Committee of the Whole

Pigeonholes –“Hostile” committees –Committees may sit on a bill so that it never sees the ‘light of day’ Ignorant Action –Members of the Committee of the Whole may not bother to read the bills they vote on –Members instead read committee reports (or merely the report summary) Contrary Assignment –Members assigned to committees outside their constituents’ interest –Members may be assigned to committees irrelevant to their campaigns Staff decisions –Committee reports generally written by committee staff members with little involvement by elected members Disadvantages of Committees

Activity Consider the following passage from Woodrow Wilson: “When a bill passes from the clerk’s desk to a committee room, it crosses a parliamentary bridge of sighs to dim dungeons of silence whence it shall never return. The means and time of its death are unknown, but its friends never see it again.” (from Congressional Government) In groups of three, discuss what he meant. Develop a strategy for getting around the problem Wilson identifies.

Question #9 Is legislative gridlock geneally beneficial or detrimental to the American people? 1.Beneficial 2.Detrimental