Joint referral
Referring a bill to two different house committees to consider at the same time (abolished by the 104th Congress in 1995)
Lead Committee
Place where bills introduced into the House are sent to be considered. Bill can be referred to secondary committee w/jurisdiction over subject matter if needed.
What is the majority of each Congressional comittee and subcommittee?
Each committee’s majority is of the same political party as the majority in the respective house of congress
Seniority system
Committee chairs are chosen by seniority/continued presidency in the standing committee (permanent committee, has defined power over legislation)
Select committee
Committee made for a specific purpose/issue
Joint committees
Committees w/two branches composed of senators and house of reps representatives, offering administrative guidance
Subcommittee
Committee which handles a much more specific part of a standing committee’s powers/decisions to make
What happens when a committee/subcommittee favors an action?
Discharge petition
(Only for house of reps) petition to take bill from committee and send directly to whole House of Reps to be considered, requiring a majority of reps to sign to work
Legislative process
Rules committee
Committee of the House of Reps, decides length of debate and restrictions of amendments that can go on the bill, and also limits floor debates in house of reps (i.e. who can speak and how long)
Unanimous consent
Senate version of rules committee, Senate small enough for members to agree to terms (but EVERY senator needs to agree)
Filibuster
plurality
2nd most + 1, someone cannot become president with plurality, you need MAJORITY
Vote of Cloture
The “nuclear option”
Conference committee
Pocket veto
Supermajority
60 votes in the senate, in general a designated percentage that is more than half + 1 for a given government, organization, etc.
Packing vs. cracking
packing: Concentrates opponents into as few districts as possible, theyre guaranteed to win them by landslides but between all the districts gerrymandering party has advantage
cracking: divides concentrated areas of a party to create a majority in multiple districts
Are the populations of congressional districts equal across the country? Why?
No, as although 385 districts have roughly equal populations, the other 50 and thus house reps. are mandated per state regardless of population
What is the “one person one vote” principle? What court case established it for congressional districts?
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Congress is responsible for:
Makes laws, declares war, regulates interstate and foreign commerce, controls taxing and spending policies