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Powers of Congress Houses and Members of Congress.

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Presentation on theme: "Powers of Congress Houses and Members of Congress."— Presentation transcript:

1 Powers of Congress Houses and Members of Congress

2 The Constitution and the Legislative Branch of the Government  Article I describes structure of Congress Bicameral legislature  Divided into two houses Each state sends two Senators regardless of population. Number of Representatives each state sends to the House is determined by state population.

3 The Constitution Congress  Constitution sets out requirements for membership in the House and Senate House of Representatives  25 years of age  Reside in U.S. at least 7 years  Serve 2 year terms Senate  30 years of age  Reside in U.S. at least 9 years  Serve 6 year terms ALL members of Congress must be legal residents of their states.

4 The Representatives and Senators  The Job Salary of $168,000 (2007) with retirement benefits. Office space in D.C. and at home  Plus free staff to fill it! Travel allowances and franking privileges.  Free mail sent if it is official business. Immunity  Legal protection that keeps them from being sued for anything they say while in office! Often requires 10 to 14 hour days and lots of time away from the family

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6 Congressional Demographics  Members tend to be Better educated than the population in general  Over 2/3’s have advanced degrees. Richer  Nearly 200 are millionaires 21 Senators are worth at least 3.1 million Male White Average age is 60 for Senators; 54 for House members.

7 Blacks, Hispanics, and Women in Congress, 1971-2006

8 Apportionment and Redistricting  Apportionment  Proportional process of allotting congressional seats to each state following the ten year census Census = official count of our population  Redistricting (AKA gerrymandering)  Redrawing of congressional districts to reflect increases or decreases in seats allotted to the states as well as population shifts within a state

9 Pearson Education, Inc. © 2006 Gerrymandering: good or bad?

10 Congressional Elections  Who Wins Elections? Incumbent: Officials already holding office.

11 Congressional Elections, cont.  The Advantages of Incumbents Name recognition:  Once the public knows you, they vote for you! Advertising:  The goal is to be visible to your voters.  Frequent trips home & newsletters are used. Credit Claiming:  Service to individuals in their district.

12 Congressional Elections, cont.  The Advantages of Incumbents Weak Opponents:  Most opponents are inexperienced in politics.  Most opponents are unorganized and underfunded. Campaign Spending :  PACs give most of their money to incumbents. Why?  Does PAC money “buy” votes in Congress?


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