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Published byHorace Cobb Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 6 (Part 2)
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Senate: 30 years old, live in state you represent and be a citizen for 9 years House: 25 years old, live in the state you represent and be a citizen for 7 years Privileges: Salary: current annual salary of $165,200/yr for both houses Free parking, free office space, free trips to home states, send job related mail without paying postage – known as franking privilege
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Personal Staff: Run offices in Washington, DC as well as home state Deal with lobbyist – people hired by private groups to influence government Committee Staff: Draft/outline bills, gather information, organize committee hearings, negotiate with lobbyists Support Services: Library of Congress – one copy of every book published in the United States is kept there Finance and Budget: (Congressional Budget Office) Makes no policy recommendations, but offers estimates to costs and economic effects of programs
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Casework – Congressional helping of home district in dealing with federal government (10,000+ requests in a year) Helping District: Public Works – bills that fund things like post offices, dams, military bases, and veteran’s hospitals Grants/Contracts – Help gain money source for home districts Pork-barrel projects – Government grants the primarily benefit home district/state Influence – make deals to get deals
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Two Bill Categories 1. Private Bills: Concern individual people or places – dealing with claims against government 2. Public Bills: apply to the entire nation and involve general matters like taxation Joint Resolutions – Formal statements passed by both houses – become laws if signed by the president Amendments & designate money for special purpose
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1. Starts as an idea 2. Committee Action – 1. 1. Pass, 2. Mark with changes, 3. Replace with new bill, 4. ignore bill and let die, 5. kill bill with majority 3. Debate – Houses discuss pros/cons of bill 1. Rules: fillibuster – “talk a bill to death” – take floor and talk to bill dies (can be ended with a 3/5 vote known as cloture)
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1. Voting - House Voice Vote – simply vote yea or no Standing Vote – Those in favor stand Record Vote – votes are recorded electronically 2. Voting – Senate Voice Vote, Standing Vote, and Roll Call Vote – call aye or no as names are called (majority of members present needed to pass) Senate and House must pass identical forms of bill
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After a bill is passed it goes to the president Actions: Veto – Refuse to sign the bill Pocket Veto – president does nothing for 10 days If Congress is in session – bill becomes law without signature If Congress is adjourned – bill dies (The Pocket Veto) If Vetoed Congress can save the bill with a presidential override – requires 2/3 vote from each house 1789-2005 – only 106 vetoes have been overturned
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