Congress: is broken into two levels State and National.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
House of Representatives vs. Senate
Advertisements

Article 1 U.S. Constitution
Chapter 10 Congress.
The House of Representatives And The Senate. Congressional Sessions  Each term of Congress has two sessions  Sessions last until Congress votes to adjourn.
U.S. Government What do you know about Congress? List 3 things:
The Legislative Branch
Aim: What is the role of the Legislative Branch?
Chapter 10 Congress.
Article I: The Legislative Branch of the Federal Government.
The Legislative Branch. Bicameral Legislature BICAMERAL= TWO HOUSES Historical: The British Parliament consisted of two houses since the 1300s, and many.
CONGRESS TEST REVIEW. When members of Congress add special amendments to a routine bill this is called pork barrel politics.
Chapter 10, Sections 2 & 3. Chapter 10, Section 2.
Congress – Day 1 Ms. Farr U.S. Government.
American Government Congress.
THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS EL DORADO HIGH SCHOOL 2015 MR. RUIZ.
Article One Legislative Branch
United States Government Basics. Legislative Branch Bicameral Legislature Congress Senate House of Representatives.
The Legislative Branch
Congress A Bicameral Congress  Historical Reasoning – The Framers chose to create a bicameral legislature because that is what they were familiar with.
3/31 Monday O Which amendments deal with Congress? O Agenda: O TOTD O Turn in Amendment Research from Friday O Amendment Review O Test #5 Amendments pgs.
Chapter 10. Objectives: Chapter 10 Section 1 The National Legislature 1. Why does the Constitution divide power between the two houses of Congress? 2.
Congress Organization. Bicameral Legislature Two houses make up the US Congress- the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Article One Legislative Branch. House vs. Senate 435 Representatives Based on population- More people more reps Elected directly by the people Each state.
The Legislative Branch
123 Go To Section: 4 Congress C H A P T E R 10 Congress SECTION 1 The National Legislature SECTION 2 The House of Representatives SECTION 3 The Senate.
HOUSE SENATE Bills and Laws Congress or States Article.
 SSCG9: The student will explain the differences between the House of Representatives and the Senate, with emphasis on terms of office, powers, organization,
Presentation Pro © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 10 Congress.
Unit 6: The Legislative Branch ~ Section 1 – Congressional Membership.
Chapter 5 Section 1 (pgs ) The Senate and the House of Representatives ESSENTIAL QUESTION: HOW IS CONGRESS SET UP?
The Legislative Branch Congress. The Legislative Branch  The primary responsibility is to make the laws.  Make decisions based upon: constituents, personal.
How are Presidents Elected? Unit 10 Part 2. Electoral College – Today – New Way The electoral college elects the president – NOT THE DIRECT or “POPULAR”
Powers of Congress Houses and Members of Congress.
Chapter 10.  Congress makes laws  Bicameral – made up of two houses, the House of Representatives and the Senate  Gives fair representation to both.
Congress. 2 ★ Senate ★ House of Representatives 3 House of Representatives ★ Representation in the House is based on population - average size of a congressional.
Size, Qualifications, The Job and Pay.  Members – 435 Set by Reapportionment Act of 1929  Apportion – Distribute  Reapportion – Redistribute (Every.
Congress. Introduction The Framers of the United States Constitution created a bicameral Congress consisting of a House of Representatives and a Senate.
Congress Senator Mike Rounds Senator John Thune.
CONGRESS CHAPTER 10. QUALIFICATIONS FOR CONGRESS House of RepresentativesSenate 25 Years Old30 Years Old Citizen for 7 Years Citizen for 9 Years Must.
The Legislative Branch Article I. The U.S. Congress  Bicameral: “2 Chambers”  Senate 100 members Six year term  House year term Reapportioned.
Back to Chapter 1 for a sec… What kind of democracy do we live in? What kind of democracy do we live in? So the people rule, but they don’t make public.
Chapter 10. The National Legislature Section 1 Why a bicameral Congress? Three reasons: – Based on British Parliament and state legislatures – Settled.
American Government Chapter 10, Congress. Ch10 Congress, Sec 1, The National Legislature The United States has a Bicameral Congress – Historical. The.
Chapter 10. The National Legislature Section 1 Why a bicameral Congress? Three reasons: – Based on British Parliament and state legislatures – Settled.
Definitions The National Legislature The House of Representatives The members of Congress The Senate $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $ 500$500.
The U.S. Congress How much do you know?.
Congress: is broken into two levels State and National
Chapter 10 Congress.
The Senate and the House of Representatives
Organization -Great Compromise of House -Senate.
Article One Legislative Branch
Legislative Branch “Congress”.
Congress.
The Legislative Branch
Chapter 10 Congress.
Legislative Branch House of Representatives vs
Legislative Branch “Congress”.
The Legislative Branch (Congress)
Legislative Branch House of Representatives vs. Senate
Legislative Branch House of Representatives vs. Senate
Coach Kuntz United States History
Ch. 10—Congress.
Congress Unit 2.
Legislative Branch “Congress”.
4-3: Differences Between the House and the Senate
4-4: Differences Between the House and the Senate
Chapter 15 Congress.
Legislative Branch.
Legislative Branch National Washington, D.C..
House of Representatives vs. The Senate
Presentation transcript:

Congress: is broken into two levels State and National

SD Senator Tim Johnson Born in Canton raised and graduated from Vermillion High School

SD Senator John Thune Born in Pierre raised in Murdo, SD and graduated from Jones Co. High School.

SD House of Representative Kristi Noem Born in Watertown raised on a farm near Castlewood and graduated from Hamlin High School

Ours is a Bicameral Congress The House represents the People The number each state has is based on population The Senate represents the State The number each state has is equal (2)

Term + Session + Special Sessions A Congressional Term is two years The 110th Congress Term began in January 2007 and end December of Each Congress has two sessions of one year each. The first session of the 110 th Congress ended in December 2007.

Special Sessions Presidents may call Congress to meet in special sessions. A famous special session was held December 8 th, Special Sessions are rare today.

The House 435 Members Elected from single member districts Districts average 650,000 people South Dakota has 1 Districts of 789,919 A states number of districts are based on it’s size in each decennial (10 years) census.

Apportionment & Reapportionment The drawing of state Congressional district lines is known as apportionment. Gerrymandering is drawing district lines to benefit a political party.

Constitutional Requirements for the House of Representatives (2 yr term) 25 years old or older Citizen for seven or more years Resident of the State electing you Traditionally, a resident of your district

Constitutional Requirements for the Senate (6 year term) 30 years old or older Citizen for nine or more years Resident of the State electing you Traditionally, a resident of the state, unless named Hillary (NY, DC)

The Senate 100 Members 2 Senators per state Direct Election since the passage of the 17 th Amendment to the Constitution Originally chosen indirectly by state legislatures.

Special Powers of Congress The House: -All money bills must begin in the House -All impeachments begin in the House -Most House votes require only a simple majority. The Senate: - Approves all presidential appointments. - By a 2/3’s vote:Approves all treaties and serves as the court in impeachments.

Congress the Job 1.Legislator 2.Committee Member 3.Representative of their constituents 4.Servant of their constituents 5. Politician

Salary - $133,600 Allowances: Staff Travel Office Mail Pay and Allowances

The Average CongressMAN Male Age 50+ Married Two Kids College Grad Attorney Church Goer Prior Political Experience Wealthy

Congress and the Electoral College The members of both Houses combined is directly proportional to the electoral college.

Winner take all! The controversial system used to elect the President of the United States is called the Electoral College. It is referred to as a “winner take all” system because general if you win the popular vote of the state you get all that states electoral voted (which is based on its number of total congress people). Th win the Presidential election you need 270 of the 525 electoral votes.

Example of each States Representatives

2008 Election electoral votes to wins (69.5m to 59.9 m –Popoular)

2000 Election

Other Close Elections