Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Chapter 11 Lawmakers & Legislatures
2
???? Main goal of a lawmaker?????
3
Main goal To keep their job Always thinking about staying in office
Continual re-election
4
You must be….. Elect-able Be able to raise $$ Play political games
Bring projects back to your home state
5
Constituents A person who lives in an electoral district and is represented by an elected official
6
connection Lawmakers serve a group of people House = home district
Senate = state
7
qualifications “C” establishes
Both “H” & “S” must live in the state from which they are elected “H” = 25 “S” = 30 “H” = citizen 7 years “S” = citizen 9 years
8
That’s all Do you think there should be more qualifications??
9
Informal qualifications
Characteristics that people look for in elected officials What do you think? Come up with 5 at your table
10
traditionally White male middle to upper class
11
1960-1970’s Women and minority candidates challenged this tradition
Late 1960’s = 200 women 2012 = 1840 women At both the state and national level
12
Minorities African Americans Latinos 2011 = 68 2016 = 19%
13
Other…. Informal qualifications… Education Occupation
14
Education Most members of Congress have a college degree and many have advanced degrees Majority = Law or Business
15
Occupation Lawyers CEO Scientists Teachers Doctors Farmers Writers
Bankers Comedians Actors
16
Apportionment Equal Representation
Senate = 100 seats (2 from each state) House = 435 seats (each seat represents one congressional district)
17
Number of Seats Fixed by Congress in 1911
Can be changed by Congress at any time
18
House Seats are apportioned OR
Divided among the states according to each state’s population MI has 14 districts or seats
19
How to get that # Every 10 years the government takes a census OR
A count of the nation’s population
20
And…….. That number is used to calculate how the House seats should be distributed among the states More population = more seats Less = less
21
But… Each state is guaranteed at least one seat ND SD WY MT AK
22
Page 198 After the 2010 census…… Which states gain a seat?
Which states lost a seat? More than one????
23
Idea Equal representation “One person one vote”
Each district should have the same amount of people
24
As of 2010 census House average 710,700 per district
25
Senate States are equal Each state gets 2 senators
Each state has same weight even with different populations WY = (500,000 people) CA = (37 million people)
26
Job of Legislator 2 roles Delegate Trustee
27
Delegate Represent their district as the people wish
Respond directly to what the people want
28
Trustee Represent their district with independent judgment
Serve the needs of the district with larger interests. They are trusted to do the right thing
29
Many Combine the 2 roles Depends on the issue
30
Getting elected Once elected…..can stay as long as they keep getting re-elected No term limits in Congress (Yes….term limits in the State House)
31
Meaning 80% of incumbent senators have won re-election Why?
Do they have an advantage? YES
32
Name recognition They are familiar with voters News
Trusted by voters to be effective
33
Office resources Staff Travel allowances
They can easily keep in touch with their home district or state
34
Campaign funds Incumbents tend to get more doantions than challengers
2012 $971 million vs $398 million
35
Bragging rights They can point to projects that they have accomplished in office Especially ones in their state Roads contracts
36
PORK Called PORK because the $$ for these projects comes from the federal “pork barrel” or treasury These officials “bring home the bacon”
37
Challenger Does not have this opportunity BUT…..
No guarantee that the incumbent will win
38
Meaning If Congress hasn’t done a good job or has failed with major issues………votes may vote the incumbents out of office during the next election
39
Check Number of total Senate seats? Number of total House seats?
How many senators from each state? How is the number of House Representitives determined?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.