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Unit 3 – Legislative Branch/Congress. The Capitol Building.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit 3 – Legislative Branch/Congress. The Capitol Building."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit 3 – Legislative Branch/Congress

2 The Capitol Building

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4 Main Ideas  Congress is bicameral, which means divided into two houses.  In the House of Representatives, States are represented according to population.  In the Senate, each State has 2 Senators.  Congress meets for two-year terms

5 Two Houses of Congress House of Representatives Senate

6 The Constitution  Congress is part of the Legislative Branch  Therefore, our Congressmen have the job of translating the public will into public policy in the form of law  James Madison called it “the first branch” of the National Government  Article I of the Constitution created the Legislative Branch. It is the very first and longest of the three articles of the Constitution.

7 Bicameralism  Why is Congress divided into two houses?  Because our founding fathers saw bicameralism as a way to diffuse the power of Congress, which prevented it from overwhelming the other two branches of government.  NJ Plan & VA Plan

8 Congressional Terms  Each term of Congress lasts 2 years.  The beginning of each 2 year term is “noon of the 3 rd day in January” of every odd numbered year.  So the Congressmen we elected last year started January 3 rd, 2013.  While each term is 2 years, there are no term limits in Congress.  This means the same Senator or Representative can stay in Congress for life as long as he/she keeps getting reelected.

9 Term Limits: Videos  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QORVqG3rN5Y&feat ure=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1& safe=active http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QORVqG3rN5Y&feat ure=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1& safe=active  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPRJMGnGrfE&feat ure=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1& safe=active http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPRJMGnGrfE&feat ure=related&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1& safe=active

10 Sessions  A session of Congress is that period of time during each year when Congress assembles and conducts business.  There are two sessions to each term of Congress, with one session each year.  These sessions usually last most of the year, with several short weeklong breaks during a session.

11 Special Sessions  A special session is a meeting of Congress or an individual house to deal with some emergency situation.  Only 27 special sessions of Congress have ever been called by the President.  Most recent: President Harry Truman in 1948 in the aftermath of World War II.  Senate alone has been called into special session 46 times to consider treaties or presidential appointments, but not since 1933.  The President may call Congress into a special session, however Congressional leadership has as well…though their authority is not supreme.

12 House of Representatives  Representation based on population  Each state guaranteed 1 seat in the House.  Example: Alaska & Delaware each have 1 representative.  435 Representatives total.  Redistribution of the number of members takes place every 10 years, which coincides with the census.

13 Qualifications for the House  Must be at least 25  Citizen of the U.S. for at least 7 years  Must be an inhabitant of the State from which he or she is elected

14 Reapportionment Act of 1929  In 1920, The House kept getting bigger & bigger. Conducting business became difficult.  1920 census comes out & if Congress were to reapportion seats in the House, then some States would have to lose seats if every State were to be represented according to its population.  But they did do something in 1929: The Reapportionment Act.  Set the “permanent” size of Representatives at 435.

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16 Districts  Each Representative in the House represents their district  We are in VA’s 10 th Congressional district.  Republican Frank Wolf is our Rep.  In small states with only one Representative, the district is the whole state, and the entire population votes – not just a district (Ex: Delaware & North Dakota).

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18 The Senate  Equal Representation (NJ Plan!)  6 year terms  All time record – Republican Strom Thurmond was elected to the Senate 8 times, and served for 48 years.  Each state gets 2 Senators  Virginia’s are:  That means, 100 Senators total.  50 x 2 = 100 Above: (D) Mark Warner (D) Tim Kaine 

19 Qualifications for the Senate  At least 30 years old  Citizen of the U.S. for at least nine years  Must be an inhabitant of the State from which he or she is elected

20 The Senate  The Founding Fathers hoped that the smaller Senate would be a more enlightened and responsible body than the House.  They thought the House would be too often swayed by the immediate impact of events and by the passions of the moment  “The World’s Greatest Deliberative Body” “The World’s Greatest Deliberative Body”

21 The Senate  The Senate is a “continuous body”  This means that all of its seats are never up for election at the same time.  6 year terms give Senators some job security  Since they represent an entire State, they have a huge constituency, which means the people and interests the Senators represent.

22 Comparing both Houses of Congress House of RepresentativesThe Senate Larger body (435 members)Smaller body (100 members) Shorter term (2 years)Longer term (6 years) Smaller constituencies (elected from districts within States) Larger constituencies (elected from the entire State) Younger membersOlder members Less prestigeMore prestige Most work done in committees, not on the floor Work is split more evenly between committees & the floor Strict rules, limited debateFlexible rules, nearly unlimited debate No power over treaties/presidential appointments Approves/rejects treaties & presidential appointments

23 Gerrymandering  Gerrymandering – District lines that have been drawn to the advantage of the political party that controls the State’s legislature  Most often gerrymandering takes one of two forms:  Lines are drawn to concentrate the oppositions voters in one or a few districts, thus leaving the other districts comfortable safe for the dominant party  Or to spread the opposition as thinly as possible among several districts, limiting the oppositions ability to win anywhere in the region  Happens today!

24 The Profile of Congress  The average member is a white male in his early 50s.  There are more women in Congress today than ever  There are 42 African Americans, 24 Hispanics, 5 Asian Americans, and 1 Native American in the House.  There is 1 African American, 2 Hispanics, 1 Asian American, and 1 Native Hawaiian in the Senate.

25 The Profile of Congress  Well over 1/3 rd in the House and well over ½ in the Senate are lawyers, and nearly all went to college.  There are several multi-millionaires  However, a surprisingly large number of the men and women who sit in Congress depend on their congressional salaries as their major source of income.  So do these people represent the people?

26 How They Cast Their Votes  Our representatives can vote on four different views  1.) Trustees – These representatives vote on the basis of themselves. They don’t represent their constituency.  2.) Delegate – These representatives vote on the basis of their constituency only. They vote on what “the folks back home would want.”  3.) Partisans – These representatives vote in line with the political party they identify with  4.) Politicos – A combination of all the above.

27 Salary and Benefits  Senators and Representatives make $162,000 per year.  A few make more: The Speaker of the House makes $208,100 per year  House Minority/Majority floor leaders in both houses make $180,100 per year.  They also receive special tax deductions  They receive travel allowances to go to Washington  Franking Privilege: Allows them to mail letters and other materials postage-free by substituting their signature instead of the postage.


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