1 / 18

Georgia's Legislature

Georgia's Legislature . U.S. Constitution. The U.S constitution states: the powers not delegated to the U.S. by the constitution, nor prohibited by it are reserved to the states or the people. .

elaine
Télécharger la présentation

Georgia's Legislature

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Georgia's Legislature

  2. U.S. Constitution • The U.S constitution states: the powers not delegated to the U.S. by the constitution, nor prohibited by it are reserved to the states or the people. • 1789, Georgia’s General assembly was reorganized as a bicameral or two-house legislature with a Senate and a House of Representatives.

  3. Qualifications House of Representitives Senate 56 members Must be 25 Have lived in Georgia 2 years Resident of district Citizen of U.S. • 180 members • Must be 21 years old • Have lived in Georgia 2 years • Resident of the district • Citizen of the U.S.

  4. House of Representatives and Senate Roles • Only the House can write spending bills and only the Senate can confirm executive appointments. • Either house can propose a bill. All bills must be approved by both houses before going to the governor.

  5. How many? • There are 180 members of the House of Representatives and 56 members of the Senate. • Requirements: • Senate: 25, U.S. citizen, Georgia 2 years and live in district • House: 21, U.S. citizen, Georgia 2 years and live in district.

  6. Duties • The lieutenant governor presides over the senate. • Members of the House elect a speaker as their presiding officer.

  7. Duties of the presiding officers • Determine the order of business • Control debate • Rule out proposed amendments to bills • Enforce rules of procedure for the general assembly • Control meeting times and recesses • Order a roll call vote

  8. Bills • All bills must reviewed by a house of senate committees before they can be brought to either the whole house or sent for a vote.

  9. Committees • The advantage of committees is each bill gets looked at closely. • There are three standing committees: • 1. Ways and Means =taxes • 2. appropriations =budget • 3. judiciary =laws and courts

  10. committees • Interim committee works on assigned issues and concerns between sessions of the legislature. • Conference committee is appointed when the House and Senate pass two different versions of the same law. • Joint committee is made up of both houses to work on an assigned topic or issue.

  11. Legislation • The General Assembly can pass legislation on such matters as taxes, education and property. • Like the Federal government Georgia must work each year from a budget that outlines sources of income for the state, called revenues and plans for spending those funds, called expenditures.

  12. Budget • Georgia’s constitution requires that the state have a budget, one that matches expenditures and revenues.

  13. Revenue • Georgia has three basic sources of revenue • 1. state funds • 2. special funds • 3. federal funds • Federal and state funding sources or revenue include: income tax, sales tax, lottery, trust funds, and tobacco settlements.

  14. Revenue • About 90% of Georgia's revenue comes from taxes.

  15. How a bill becomes a law Works like the federal except it is the Governor .

  16. District lines • One task of the legislature every 10 years is to redraw the maps dividing Georgia into voting districts. • In the 2000 census, Georgia gained House seats, moving from 11 to 13. • In recent years metro and northern counties have been republican.

  17. Capitals • Savannah, Augusta, Louisville, Milledgeville Atlanta.

More Related