Legislative Branch Structure The legislative branch includes the House of Representatives and the Senate. Article I of the U.S. Constitution outlines the.

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Presentation transcript:

Legislative Branch Structure The legislative branch includes the House of Representatives and the Senate. Article I of the U.S. Constitution outlines the structure, roles and responsibilities of Congress. Key Article I themes include: – A two-house legislature (the House of Representatives and Senate) – Specific powers delegated to Congress

The Powers of Congress Congress makes laws for the entire nation. Article I, Section 8 gives Congress the power to lay and collect taxes, declare war, coin money, regulate immigration, naturalization and trade, and to raise and support the armed forces. Article I also gives Congress the power to impeach and remove high level public officials where the House impeaches and the Senate holds trials.

The Structure of the Legislative Branch Level of Government Legislative Titles Chamber Titles Institution Title Members NationalRepresentative Senator U.S. House of Representatives U.S. Senate U.S. Congress 435 U.S. Representatives 100 U.S. Senators StateRepresentative Senator Florida House of Representatives Florida Senate Florida Legislature 120 Representatives 40 Senators LocalCity/County Commissioner N/ACity Council County Commission Determined by city and county charters

The Legislative Process at the National and State Levels of Government PowerExplanation of PowerPossible Outcome Introduce Legislation Ask the legislative chamber to consider a proposed law (bill) Bill is forwarded to committee Forward Bill to Committee Ask a committee to consider the billBill is forwarded to legislative chamber Vote on BillA majority of members of each chamber (50%+1) must approve of the bill before it is forwarded to the chief executive Bill is forwarded to the chief executive Chief Executive acts on Bill Chief Executive may sign the bill into law or veto the bill. National law State statute

How A Bill Becomes A Law

The Appointment Process PowerLevel of GovernmentExplanation of Power Nomination by Chief Executive (U.S. president or Florida governor) National State The Chief Executive nominates persons to hold specific public offices. Appointment by Senate National State The U.S. Senate must approve, by majority vote, of persons named by the president to hold specific offices (nominees). The Florida Senate must approve, by majority vote, of persons named by the governor to hold specific offices (nominees).

The Impeachment Process PowerLevel of Government Explanation of PowerPossible Outcome ImpeachNational State The power to bring charges of official wrongdoing against a person holding public office Impeachment requires a majority vote in the U.S. House of Representatives. Impeachment requires a majority vote in the Florida House of Representatives ConvictNational State Conviction leads to the removal of executive and judicial branch officials and a criminal record Conviction requires a 2/3 vote in the U.S. Senate. Conviction requires a 2/3 vote in the Florida Senate.

Party Leadership Congress and the Florida Legislature Majority leader: The leader chosen by the party with the most seats in his or her house of Congress; this person represents the majority party in policy debates. Minority leader: The leader chosen by the party with the least seats in his or her house of Congress; this person represents the minority party in policy debates. President pro tempore of the Senate: The second highest ranking member of the U.S. Senate (The U.S. Constitution provides that the vice-president is the president of the Senate). The person who presides over the Florida Senate when the Senate president is not present. Speaker of the House: The person who presides over the U.S. House of Representatives/the person who presides over the Florida House of Representatives. The majority party selects the Speaker of the House in the United States and in Florida.