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Legislative Branch Ch 10 - 12.

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Presentation on theme: "Legislative Branch Ch 10 - 12."— Presentation transcript:

1 Legislative Branch Ch

2 Bicameral and Terms Reasons to be Bicameral
Historical- Parliament was this way Compromise- to get adopted Checks and Balances Term - time in office Starts Jan Noon of every odd-numbered year.

3 Congressional Business Vocab
Sessions-time conducting business Congress can adjourn any meeting as it sees fit President can prorogue meetings if both houses cannot agree on a date President can call special sessions if it is an emergency

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5 House Of Representatives
435 members permanently set Apportionment Act of 1911 No limits on the number of terms one may serve. Number of seats apportioned (distributed) among the States on the basis of populations. Reapportioned after every 10 years (census) Each district has 1 rep AZ has 9 reps Some districts have been redrawn in past to benefit specific groups. Gerrymandering

6 Before 2010 Census

7 Currently

8 Congressional Elections
Held on the Tuesday following the first Monday in November of each even-numbered year. Off-year elections-elections held between presidential elections.

9 Senate Facts Two senators per state.
17th Amendment called for the popular election of senators. (used to be elected by state legislatures) Continuous body because only 1/3 are up for election at any one time.

10 Current Arizona Senators and Representatives
John McCain Jeff Flake Representatives Tom O’Halleran (D) Martha McSally (R) Raul Grijalva (D) Paul Gosar (R) Andy Biggs (R) David Schweikert (R) Ruben Gallego (D) Trent Franks (R) Kyrsten Sinema (D)

11 Expressed Powers of Congress
Create posters on powers found in Article 1 Section 8 Name of Power Actual clause wording from the Constitution Modern Definition/usage Illustration or visual Any exceptions, abuses, etc.

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13 Any ideas what our debt is currently?

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17 Regulatory Functions Consumer Protection-Dodd Frank Bill
Environment-EPA Health-FDA Labor-safety organization, BBB Transportation-TSA Communication-FCC

18 Necessary and Proper Clause
“To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.” —Article I, Section 8, Clause 18 Led to increased power of the federal government DON’T COPY

19 Impeachment Power Remove the President, Vice President, or other civil officers from their office House impeaches bring charges against the individual. Senate has trial. two-thirds vote of the senators present is needed for conviction. The penalty is removal from office.

20 Investigatory Power Reasons to investigate Gather information
Oversee executive branch Bring attention to subject Expose questionable activities of officials Promote interests of certain members

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22 Speaker of the House Presiding officer of the House of Representatives
Acknowledged leader of the majority party. Duties presiding over and keeping order in the House. Names the members of all select and conference committees signs all bills and resolutions passed by the House.

23 President of Senate Vice President
Same duties as the Speaker of the House, but cannot cast votes on legislation. The president pro tempore, the leader of the majority party, is elected from the Senate and serves in the Vice President’s absence.

24 Types of Bills and Resolutions
Private (specific people or locations) Public (entire country) Resolutions (business of specific house) Joint (special situation) Has force of law Concurrent (joint statement on issue)

25 How a Bill Becomes Law DON’T COPY

26 See Page 330

27 DON’T COPY

28 Filibuster (don’t copy)
Attempt to “talk a bill to death.” Senator may exercise his or her right of holding the floor as long as necessary, and in essence talk until a measure is dropped.

29 When the president receives a bill,

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31 Building a Budget Governments are funded by taxes Federal State Local
Income Duties Excise taxes Corporate tax State Income tax Sales tax Local Property tax


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