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The Legislative Branch Chapter 4
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Texas Legislature - Elections Apportionment and Redistricting Apportionment: basis for representation. Texas Senate was “qualified electors;” House was “population.” Limits and “rotten boroughs” Districting: drawing the boundaries for districts: House, Senate, U.S. House of Representatives. Districts must be compact, contiguous, approximately equal in population. Ideal size: Senate=672,639; House=139,012.
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Texas Legislature - Elections Redistricting Process (TX House and Senate) Legislature passes redistricting bill. Governor may veto. If legislature cannot pass a redistricting bill, the governor vetoes the bill, or a court rules the bill unconstitutional, then a Legislative Redistricting Board (Lt. Gov., Speaker, AG, Comptroller, Land Commissioner) draws the districts. Gerrymandering Packing Cracking
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Texas Legislature - Elections Redistricting Process (US House) Legislature passes redistricting bill. Governor may veto. If legislature cannot pass a redistricting bill, the governor vetoes the bill, or a court rules the bill unconstitutional, then a U.S. District Court must draw the district boundaries. 2003 Redistricting 2002 Elections 2003 Regular Session 2003 Special Sessions
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Texas Legislature - Elections Reelection rates and turnover Texas House: 1998=16%; 2000=7%; 2002=23%; 2004=11%; 2006=18%; 2008=13% Texas Senate: 1998=6%; 2000=3%; 2002=23%; 2004=6%; 2006=16%; 2008=13% Tenure, 2009: House= 8 years; Senate=14 years Term Limits?
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Texas Legislature - Structure Bicameral Biennial meetings, Odd years House Members – 150 House, 31 Senate Tenure – 2 years House, 4 years Senate Compensation – salary ($7,200) and per diem ($168 in 2009) Residence – House – 2 years state, 1 year district Residence – Senate – 5 years state, 1 year district Age – House – 21, Senate - 26
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Texas Legislature – Characteristics of Members Occupation, education, and religion Businesspersons and lawyers Majority have advanced degrees Catholics, Baptists, Methodists, and Episcopalians Gender, race, and age 43 Women (6 Senate; 37 House) 38 Hispanics (6 Senate; 32 House) 16 African Americans (2 Senate; 14 House) 2 Asian American (House) Average age: 51 House; 54 Senate
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Texas Legislature – Characteristics of Members Political Party Historically, Democrats had majorities 2009, House: 76 Republicans, 74 Democrats Senate: 19 Republicans, 12 Democrats Ideology--2007 70 Conservatives: 68 Republicans, 2 Democrats 36 Liberals: 33 Democrats, 3 Republicans 38 Populists: 33 Democrats, 5 Republican 4 Libertarians: All Republicans
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Texas House–Composition
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Texas Senate–Composition
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Texas Legislature - Organization Leadership Senate – Lieutenant Governor House – Speaker Committees Types of Committees Standing Special Interim Joint Conference Composition
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House Committees – 81 st Legislature 34 Standing Committees 28 Substantive 6 Procedural 18 Republican Chairs 16 Democratic Chairs
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Senate Committees – 81 st Legislature 18 Standing Committees 16 Substantive 2 Procedural 12 Republican Chairs 6 Democratic Chairs
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Powers – Speaker of the House In the leadership system Appoints chairs and vice chairs of substantive committees Appoints housekeeping and leadership committees Appoints speaker pro tempore
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Powers – Speaker of the House In the committee system Appoints half of substantive committee members Appoints all members of the Appropriations Committee Appoints select, conference, and interim committee members Determines jurisdiction of committees through control over House Rules
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Powers – Speaker of the House In the staff system Appoints officers, employees, and personnel Appoints members of the Legislative Budget Board (Speaker, Appropriations Chair, Ways and Means Chair, 2 others) and Legislative Council (House Administration Chair, 5 others). Appoints members of the Sunset Advisory Commission (5 House members and 1 public member).
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Powers – Speaker of the House In the system of rules and procedures Writes the rules for the House Applies, enforces, and interprets the rules Refers bills to committees Presides over activities in the House Schedules bills for floor debate (Calendars Committee)
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Opposition in the House House Study Group (1975) Opposition to Speaker Clayton Morphed into House Research Organization Texas Conservative Coalition (1985) http://www.txcc.org/ http://www.txcc.org/ Formed in opposition to legislation Created research institute Legislative Study Group (1994) http://www.texaslsg.org/ http://www.texaslsg.org/ Moderate and progressive members
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Think Tanks Texas Public Policy Foundation http://www.texaspolicy.com http://www.texaspolicy.com Conservative group Publications, Forums, etc. Center for Public Policy Priorities http://www.cppp.org http://www.cppp.org Progressive group Publications, Forums, etc.
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Legislative Process - Introduction One primary author, cosponsors allowed – written permission Filing dates – no limit during first 60 days, 4/5s required after Copies – 13 required “preferred bills” – one per member – priority on calendar First reading and assignment to committee – read on 3 days – 4/5 to suspend – Speaker assigns
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Legislative Process - Committee No bill can become law unless referred to and reported on by committee Committee hearings – can consider legislation in public hearings, formal meetings, and work sessions. Meetings open to the public. Votes in open meetings. Before committee consideration – analysis of bill, fiscal note, and impact statement – criminal justice, equalized education funding, water development, tax equity, actuarial Anyone can testify before a committee
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Legislative Process - Committee Committee Actions Amend bill Substitute bill Kill bill – chair determines when and if bill gets a hearing. Two-thirds vote to remove bill. Minority report possible. Subcommittee Referred by committee chair Members chosen by chair
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Legislative Process – Committee Report Recorded vote adopting report Recommendation of assignment to a calendar Amendments and recommendation Effect of bill on existing law Analysis and synopsis of bill Summary of committee hearing
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Legislative Process – Calendar Committee Assignment – 7 days – placed on one of House calendars Placement – daily calendar – only bills debated on the floor. Cannot require placement by the committee – 36 hours before second reading
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Legislative Process – Floor Order of business Registration of members – 2/3 quorum Daily order of business Call to order Registration of members Consideration of calendars – Emergency, Major State, Constitutional Amendments, General State, Local, Consent, Resolutions
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Legislative Process – Floor Daily order of Business (Continued) Second reading – amendments possible. Sponsor opens and closes debate (20 minutes). Others get 10 minutes. Limit by previous question or motion to limit amendments. Voting by voice or roll call. Third reading – separate legislative day. Four- fifths to suspend rule. Amendments require 2/3 vote.
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Legislative Process – Senate Calendaring Function – “blocker” bill Intent Calendar – president of the Senate Two-thirds vote – 21 senators – to suspend rules and consider bill Debates – no limit Filibuster
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Legislative Process – Conference Committee Five representatives Five senators Vote by chamber Majority of each chamber required Returns to chambers Only consider differences
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Legislative Process – Gubernatorial actions Ten days to sign or veto bill if legislature is in session. Bills effective 90 days after end of session unless: later day set or emergency declared and 2/3 vote in both chambers (earlier date set)
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Budgeting Process - Steps Budget Preparation Governor’s Budget Office Legislative Budget Board (LBB) Constitutional Limitations Balanced budget Limit on spending growth Comptroller’s estimate Comptroller’s certification
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Budgeting Process - Steps Budget Adoption Committee Hearings House Appropriations Senate Finance House and Senate Action Conference Committee Budget Execution Governor and LBB must agree on movement of funds
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Influences on Legislative Behavior Legislative staff Individual legislators Committees Institutional Legislative Council Legislative Budget Board Senate Research Center
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Influences on Legislative Behavior Relations with the governor Call special sessions Determine agenda items for special session Veto bill Relations with lobbyists Provide information Protect interests of groups represented
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Join the Debate: Redistricting Arguments for Nonpartisan Redistricting Parties should not be able to increase their influence Legislatures will not be fair in redistricting Independent committee more likely to be fair Arguments against Nonpartisan Redistricting Truly independent or nonpartisan redistricting committee is impossible Plan consequences are observable Redistricting is a political process
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Legislative Branch and Democracy Powers of legislative leaders Legislative procedures
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