Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Unit 3 Gov: Legislative Branch
- IMPORTANT OFFICIALS
Anmerkungen:
- If independent in congress, have to align with whichever of the 2 parties you feel closer to
- HOUSE
- Speaker: usually long standing
member of the majority party…
- presiding officer of house
- always house member
Anmerkungen:
- tho it isn't required by house rules or constitution
- Speaker supposed to preside in a “fair and judicious
manner”, and commonly does…
- also to aid the
majority party
- 2 main duties: to preside and to keep order
- Chairs most meetings of the house, but can also elect another temporary presiding officer
- interprets/applies rules
- sends bill to committees
- No member may speak until they are recognized by the speaker
- Puts motions to a vote
- Rules on points of order
Anmerkungen:
- (questions of procedure raised by the house’s members)
- Decides the outcome of most voted taken on the floor of the house (speaker can be overridden by a vote of the house, but rare)
- and more!
- May debate and vote on any matter of the house (because they are an elected member)
Anmerkungen:
- Rare, but when occurs speaker must appoint temporary presiding officer
- Rules say speaker MUST vote to break a ties
- follows vice pres in line
of succession to
presidency
- SENATE
- president of the senate
- always US vice pres
- far less powerful in senate than the
speaker is in the house
- usual powers of presiding member (recognize members, put questions to a vote, etc)
- Cannot take the floor to speak
- may ONLY vote to break a tie
- President pro tempore
Anmerkungen:
- president pro tem for short
- senate’s other presiding officer, serves in the vp’s absence
- elected by senate
- always leader of the majority party (usually longest serving member)
- BOTH
- floor leaders
Anmerkungen:
- majority floor leader and minority floor leader
- Not official positions: picked by party colleagues
- Legislative strategists
- try to carry out caucus’ decisions, steer floor discussion to their party’s benefit
- Chief spokesperson for their party in each chamber
- floor leaders are assisted by whips
Anmerkungen:
- (majority whip, minority whip)
- they Do the dirty work...
- check who’s going to vote a certain way
- try to convince colleagues to vote a certain way
- Communicate between floor leaders
- A number of assistant whips serve in the house
- see all members of party are present from important votes and that
they vote with the party leadership
- committee chairs
Anmerkungen:
- major say in matters such as what bills a committee will consider, the order they’ll be considered in, at what length they’ll be considered, whether public hearings should be held, and what witnesses the committee should call
- those members who head the standing committees in each chamber
- always ranking members of the majority party
- When a committee’s bill has been reported to the floor, the committee
chairman usually manages the debate and tries to steer it to final passage
- members of standing committees
- formally elected by a floor vote at the
beginning of each term of congress:
- each party has already drawn up its own
committee roster, before the vote
- Majority party always holds majority of committee seats
- SENIORITY RULE
Anmerkungen:
- Rule is unlikely to change: those w/ real power to change it are mostly also those who benefit from it
CRITICISM- Say seniority system ignore ability, works to discourage younger members- Committee heads often originate from “safe” constituencies: those states/districts in which one party regularly wins the seat… makes chairmen out of touch w/ public opinion bc they don’t have to try as hard for electionSUPPORT allows for powerful, experienced members to be heads encourages members to stay on particular committees and thereby gain specific knowledge say rule easy to apply, eliminates potential fights within a party
- states that the most important posts in
congress, in both formal (??) and party
organizations, will be held by those party
members with the longest records of service
Anmerkungen:
- (does not apply to presiding officers, floor
leaders)
- ABOUT THE CHAMBERS... MISC
- congress convenes
- means: begins a new session
- on Jan 3 of every odd numbered yr
Anmerkungen:
- (following general elections in november)
- more work needed in House than senate at new session
- New members of House (at that point not members yet)
choose a speaker to preside during their term
Anmerkungen:
- their
election is only a formality since
majority party’s members have
settled the matter beforehand
- House elects clerk, chief administrative officer, sergeant at
arms, parliamentarian, and chaplain
Anmerkungen:
- These
ppl are NOT members of the house (elections a formality…. Majority party has already decided)
- House adopts rules that ill govern its proceedings for the term
Anmerkungen:
- Readopted often w/ little or no change at the beginning of each term
- Members of the 20 permanent committees are appointed
- Missing members on committees must be filled in,
new/re-elected members must be sworn in
- then, State of the Union Message
- about the House
- 435 members: quorum is 218
- (all up for election every 2 yrs…
- so there is no sworn members, no rules, and
no organization until opening day
ceremony
- About the senate
- a continuous body
- party caucus
Anmerkungen:
- a closed meeting of the members of
each party in each house
- Regularly held just before congress convenes in jan,
occasionally during a session too
- Deals with matters related to party organization
- Sometimes takes stands on
particular bills… but doesn’t try
(isn’t able to) force party
members to follow its decisions
- whips, committee chairmen chosen here
- LAWMAKING
- MEASURES
- BILLS
- Public Bills: Measures
applying to the nation
as a whole (taxes)
- Private Bills: Apply to
certain persons or
places only
Anmerkungen:
- Ex: congress passed an act to give 1 specific person 85,000 for damages
- RESOLUTIONS
- Joint resolutions Have force of law when
passed (similar to bills)
- Often unusual, temporary matters Also used
to propose constitutional amendments, and
for the annexation of territories
- Concurrent Resolutions Deal with things
where both chambers are needed to act
- Don’t have “force of law”
- Don't need pres signature
- Usually used by congress to state an opinion on an issue
(like foreign affairs)
- Resolutions (simple resolutions)
- Deal with things only concerning one of the
chambers (only taken up by that chamber)
- Don't need pres signature
- Often used for amendment of an old rule or adoption of a new one
- RIDERS
- provisionS not likely to pass on
their own merit that are attached
to an important measure certain
to pass
Anmerkungen:
- Often attached to appropriations measures, often called earmarks
Money bills with many riders attached: called christmas trees
- LAWMAKING PROCESS
- Article I, Section 7, clause 1: tax bills have to come from the house
- Otherwise, can come from either chamber
- HOUSE: First Reading
- Clerk of the house numbers each
bill/resolution as it is introduced
- Entered into the House Journal and the Congressional Record for the day
- Bill printed/given to all house members
- After 1st reading, the speaker/pres of senate refers the bill to one or more standing committees
Anmerkungen:
- by 1794, more than 300 committees in each chamber
- Second Reading
- Takes place during floor consideration, if bill gets that far
Anmerkungen:
- (all) Readings usually only by number and title… for more controversial/important measures, read in full during 2nd reading
- Third Reading
- Takes place just before final vote
- floor consideration: debate
- Bill reported by standing committee is placed on one
of several calendars (schedules of the order in which
bills will be taken up on the floor) in the House
Anmerkungen:
- The Calendar of the Committee of the Whole House in the State of the Union (Union Calendar)
For all bills about revenues, appropriations, or gov property
House Calendar
For all other public bills
Private calendar
For all other private bills
Corrections calendar
For all bill from the Union or House calendar taken out of order by unanimous consent of the HoR (often minor bills having no opposition)
Discharge Calendar
For petitions to discharge bills from committee
- BUT: RULES COMMITTEE
- Before most measures can be removed from a calendar, the rules committee
must approve that step and set a time for its appearance on the floor
- In this way, rules committee can kill a bill if it doesn’t grant a rule for it
Anmerkungen:
- Can also set special rules: time limits on debate, prohibit amendments to certain (or all) of the bill’s provisions
- House can suspend rules on certain
days Motion to effect it needs
supermajority of members present
(when this happens, house can go
through all needed steps to enact a
bill in 1 day-- so far from established
operating procedures)
- committees: Sift through bills reject most and only consider those
they find to be worthy of floor consideration
- Rejection of bills in a committee (they are buried/die) is called
pigeonholing
- Sometimes (rarely), committee wants to
bury/pigeonhole a measure that a
majority of the members
wants to consider
- Then, bill can be blasted out of committee with a
discharge petition: this enables members to force a bill
that has remained in committee for 20 days (7 for the
rules committee) onto the floor for consideration
Anmerkungen:
- Discharge motion can be from any member
Must be signed by majority (218) house members
When signed, committee has 7 days to report on the bill
If they do not, any member who signed the motion may, on the 2nd and 4th mondays of each month, move the bill out of the committee and to the floor
“if the motion carries” house must consider bill at once
This maneuver rarely works and isn’t tried often
- For controversial issues, committee or subcommittee often hold public hearings (for info gathering)
- Subcommittee sometimes makes trip to locations affected by a measure
- Once a bill reaches a committee, the chairman almost always refers it to several subcommittees
- When subcommittee has completed its work on a measure, it goes to full committee
- At the chairman’s direction, the committee may ... (see notes)
Anmerkungen:
- Report a bill favorably (do pass recommendation)-- chairman has to steer the bill through debate on the floor
Refuse to report the bill-- pigeonhole
Report the bill in amended form (several bills on the same subject may be combined into a single measure
Report the bill with an unfavorable recommendation (not common, but sometimes committee thinks full house should consider/does not want to take responsibility for killing it)
Report a committee bill (committee produces substantially rewritten measure as a substitute for 1 or several bills referred to it: like 3. )
- TYPES OF COMMITTEES
- standing committees: permanent panels
to which all similar bills can be sent
Anmerkungen:
- 2014: 20 standing committees in house, 16 in senate (number varies)
o Each house committee had 10-75 members… senate committee had 14-28
o Reps usually 1-2 standing committees each, senator's usually 3-4
- There are 4 committees that are not organized as subject matter bodies:
- House: Rules committee 2. House: Committee on house administration 3. House: Committee on
standards of official conduct 4. Senate: Committee on rules and administration
- House Rules Committee
- The senate doesn’t have or need a rules committee
(bc smaller, process not so closely regulated)
Anmerkungen:
- majority leader controls appearance of bills on the floor
- The speaker’s “right arm”—controls the flow of bills to the floor and sets
the conditions for their consideration there… like a screening device
Anmerkungen:
- neccesary due to the sheer amount of measures that are introduced
- bill needs rules before it can be considered on the floor
- “Bill is granted a rule”: bill is scheduled for floor consideration
- in this way, rules committee can prevent/delay/make house action on a bill difficult
- Select (special) committees
- panels set up for some specific purpose,
usually for a limited time
- Speaker/pres of senate appoints membership for these
committees w/ the advice of major/minority leaders
- often used for powers of congressional oversight, investigation
Anmerkungen:
- ex: very important during watergate
- Joint Committees
Anmerkungen:
- because many standing committees of the 2 houses duplicate each other's work, use of more joint committees has been urged
- composed of members of both houses
- sometimes select committees, most are permanent
- some are investigative in nature
- Conference Committees