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Lawmakers and Legislatures

Lawmakers and Legislatures. Who are they? What do they do?. Legislators and their Constituents. Most members of Congress start out in local politics After they gain experience, they may run for either the House or Senate The people they serve are called Constituents

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Lawmakers and Legislatures

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  1. Lawmakers and Legislatures Who are they? What do they do?

  2. Legislators and their Constituents • Most members of Congress start out in local politics • After they gain experience, they may run for either the House or Senate • The people they serve are called Constituents • The size of this group increases as they move up in politics

  3. Formal Qualifications for Members of Congress • Must be a resident of the state in which elected • House members must be at least 25 years old and must have been a U.S. citizen for at least 7 years • Senators must be at least 30 years old and a U.S. citizen for at least 9 years

  4. Informal Qualifications for Members of Congress • Members of Congress used to be all white, male, and middle to upper class • This changed starting in 1960s: Now women and minority groups are somewhat included (but it is still mostly old white rich guys) • Most have a college degree, many have advanced degrees • Most have a background in business or law

  5. Some Statistics on the 113th Congress (2013-2015) Party Composition in House *Republicans: 233 *Democrats: 200 *2 Seats are currently vacantGender Composition in Congress *100 women

  6. Religious Affiliation • Largest denomination: Catholic Racial Composition: • 19% of House members are minorities, which includes: • 43 African Americans (10%) • 34 Hispanics (8%) • 10 Asians (2%) • 2 Native Americans (.5%) • Average age of members of the House of Representatives is 57 • Average age of members of the Senate is 62

  7. Apportionment • Senate=100 seats, 2 for each state • House=435 seats, each represents 1 congressional district (approx. 700,000 people) • House seats are assigned by state’s population (each state guaranteed at least 1) • This is determined by the census, taken every 10 years. When states gain or lose population, sometimes House seats are reapportioned, and congressional districts change.

  8. Congressional Redistricting • See: • http://ed.ted.com/lessons/gerrymandering-how-drawing-jagged-lines-can-impact-an-election-christina-greer • Gerrymandering is the process of re-drawing electoral district boundaries in order to create a political advantage for a particular party by manipulating geographic boundaries. • Named after Elbridge Gerry, the governor of Massachusetts who redrew Massachusetts state election districts to benefit his Democratic-Republican party in 1812. • Gerrymandering was outlawed in 1960 by the court case Gomillion v. Lightfoot.

  9. Getting Elected • House members run for re-election every 2 years • Senators run every 6 years (1/3 up for re-election every 2 years) • Number of terms is unlimited for both • Incumbent=currently in office • During elections, incumbents have the advantages of: • name recognition • campaign funds • Solve voters issues John Dingell: D- Michigan

  10. Leadership in the House • Organization is based on the 2 major political parties • Party with the most seats controls the agenda • Speaker of the House: • presides over the House • Schedules bills for action • Also, 2nd in line to assume the Presidency in an emergency John Boehner (R-OH)

  11. Leadership in the House

  12. Who currently holds these offices? House Majority Leader: Eric Cantor (R-Va) House Minority Leader: Nancy Pelosi (D-Ca)

  13. Leadership in the Senate

  14. Who currently holds these offices? President pro tempore Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) The Vice President Joe Biden (D-Delaware)

  15. Who currently holds these offices? Senate Majority Leader: Harry Reid (D-NV) Senate Minority Leader: Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky)

  16. Purpose of Congressional Committees • Ease workload and divide work • Select worthy bills • Most bills never make it past committee stage • Help public learn about bills

  17. Types of Congressional Committees • Standing- permanent committees that deal w/ specific policy area • Select- temporary committees to study a specific issue • Joint - made up of members of both chambers, permanent or temporary • Conference- temporary committee to resolve issues over versions of a bill and create a compromised bill

  18. Choosing Committee Members • Membership extremely important for congressmen • Each political party assigns members of Congress to standing committees • Committee Chairperson • Decide when the committee will meet • How long they will discuss a bill • Manage floor debate of bills from their committee

  19. Congressional Powers • expressed powers (enumerated powers):granted to Congress explicitly in the Constitution. • Article 1 Section 8

  20. Congressional Powers • Elastic Clause: Constitution authorizes Congress to “make all laws which shall be necessary and proper.” • Powers beyond those expressed in first 17 clauses • Congress can stretch its listed powers to meet the needs of a growing nation • These implied powers must be linked to specifically assigned powers

  21. Congressional Powers • Denied Powers • Limits on Congressional Power: Bill of Rights • Cannot pass Bill of Attainder: laws that punish people w/o allowing them a trial • Ex post Facto laws: laws that make crimes of acts that were legal when committed

  22. Non-Legislative Powers (Powers aside from lawmaking) • The Power to choose a President in a tie • Impeachment: House can formally accuse a federal official of wrongdoing, Senate then conducts a trial to decide whether to remove the official from office • Confirmation: Senate approves officials appointed by the President • Ratification: Senate must approve all treaties negotiated by President before become law • Amendment: Both houses of Congress can vote to propose an amendment to the Constitution

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