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Published byJulien Trudeau Modified over 5 years ago
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Bicameral Two Houses, like the British Parliament.
House of Representatives and Senate.
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TWO Year Terms Start on Jan. noon on odd # years.
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TWO Sessions One session per year.
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Special Sessions Only the president can call them. With Congress meeting almost year round it eliminates the need for these.
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Reapportion After a census is taken to redistribute seats in the House.
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Gerrymandering Drawing district lines for the advantage of a political party.
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Caucus Conference of party members.
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Speaker of the House The presiding officer; chosen by vote of the House members (majority party choice) Nancy Pelosi
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President of the Senate
V.P. of the U.S., not a member of the Senate and can only vote in ties.
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Majority/Minority Leaders
Party officers that carry out caucus decisions.
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Majority/ Minority Whips
Assistants to the floor leaders.
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Committee Chairmen Chosen by majority party caucus for the standing committees.
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Seniority Rule A custom/tradition that really important posts on committees go to members with the longest record. Strom Thurmond
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Standing Committees Permanent groups that meet each year.
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Select Committee Special group set up for a specific purpose/time.
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Joint Committee Will use members from both houses, usually used for investigative purposes.
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BILL A proposed law; will be dropped into the hopper (wooden box) once introduced on the floor.
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Public Bill A bill that will apply to the whole nation. (taxes)
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Private Bill A bill that will apply to certain people/places.
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Joint Resolution This is used like a bill.
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Concurrent Resolutions
The House and the Senate must act together, but a law is not needed for the action to happen.
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Committee of the Whole The group can make itself into one large committee group and make work on the bill progress faster.
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Quorum The majority of full membership that would be needed in order to conduct business. Senate – 51 House - 218
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Debate in the House Usually limited to one hour per person.
The Speaker can make the person give up the floor by “moving the previous question.”
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Voting in the House 1) ayes and nayes 2) standing vote 3) roll call
4) electronic voting
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Filibuster A senator that has the floor to speak may do so as long as they can. Can not leave the chamber, sit down, or stop talking. Used by senators to stop a bill from passing.
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Cloture Rule To stop the filibuster: Have a petition with 16 members signature, 2 days later vote to invoke cloture, the vote will need 60 senators in favor of the motion; and then the speaker will be limited to only 30 hours to talk.
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Salaries Representatives $174,000.00 Leaders $193,400.00
Speaker $223,500.00
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