Presentation Pro Magruder’s American Government C H A P T E R 10 Congress © 2001 by Prentice Hall, Inc. C H A P T E R 10 Congress SECTION 1 The National Legislature SECTION 2 The House of Representatives SECTION 3 The Senate SECTION 4 The Members of Congress Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10 SECTION 1 The National Legislature • Why does the Constitution divide power between the two houses of Congress? • What is a term of Congress? • How have sessions of Congress changed over time? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10 Section 1 Congress: Warm-Up • The structure of congress is designed to ensure that all states and the people who live in them are represented fairly. How are the states represented differently in the House and Senate? Why is this structure advantageous? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 A Bi-Cameral Congress • Read pp.262,63 • Identify and explain the three reasons for having a bi-cameral legislature Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Two Houses of Congress The Constitution creates a bicameral legislature for three reasons: Historical: The British Parliament consisted of two houses since the 1300s, and many colonial assemblies were similar in form. Practical: A bicameral legislature was necessary to compromise - the Virginia and New Jersey plans of representation. Theoretical: The Framers favored a bicameral Congress in order that one house might act as a check on the other…Slow the legislative process… One More thing….A reflection of the principle of federalism? (p.263…Visual, “Representation in Congress”) Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 1 SECTION 1 The Role of The National Legislature • Remember the definition of law? •Public Policy, i.e., The will of the people •The US Constitution - Article 1, section 1: “All legislative powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and a House of Representatives.” •It is the job of the National Legislature to turn public will into public policy Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10 Section 1 A couple of “Terms” A term is the length of time that officials serve after an election, as in a two- or six-year term. The date for the start of each new term has been set by the Twentieth Amendment (1933) as “noon of the 3d day of January” of every odd-numbered year. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 1 Sessions of Congress A session is the regular period of time during which Congress conducts business. • Congress adjourns, or suspends until the next session, each regular session as it sees fit. • If necessary, the President has the power to prorogue, or adjourn, a session, but only when the two houses cannot agree on a date for adjournment. • Only the President* may call Congress into a special session—a meeting to deal with some emergency situation. • * At the State level, governors may call special sessions of state legislatures Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 1 Homework •Read: pp. 262 – 265 •Respond: 1-7, p. 265 Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Section 1 Homework Review 1.How long does a term of Congress last? 2. How does a special session differ from a regular session 3. When does Congress adjourn? 4. Who has the power to prorogue a session of congress? 5. “Congress is functioning the way the framers intended – not very well. 6. Why do some people believe the Senate is undemocratic? 7. The Articles of Confederation provided for a Congress that met for 1year terms. Why do you suppose the framers of the Constitution created a congress that meets for a term of two years? 8. Three reasons for a bi-cameral congress?? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 SECTION 2 The House of Representatives • What are the size and terms of the House of Representatives? • How are House seats reapportioned among the States after each census? • How can we describe a typical congressional election and congressional district? • What are the formal and informal qualifications for serving in the House? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 2 Size and Terms • Article 1 Section 2 Term Qualifications Number of representatives per state Three additional details Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 2 Size and Terms • • The exact size of the House of Representatives, currently at 435 members, is determined by Congress. The Constitution provides that the total number of seats in the House shall be apportioned (distributed) among the States on the basis of their respective populations. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 • • Members of the House of Representatives serve two-year terms. Although there have been recent movements to limit terms, there are no limits set on the number of terms a representative may serve. Term Limits Arguments for and against??? Chapter 10, Section 2 Qualifications for House Members • The Constitution says that a member of the House (1) must be at least 25 years of age, (2) must have been a citizen of the United States for at least seven years, and (3) must have been an inhabitant of the State from which he or she is elected. • The realities of politics also require some informal qualifications, such as party identification, name familiarity, gender, ethnic characteristics, and political experience. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 2 Congressional Elections • Congressional elections are held on the Tuesday following the first Monday in November of each even-numbered year. • Off-year elections are those congressional elections held between presidential elections. • The party of the president typically loses seats in off-year elections…Why? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 2 Back to Reapportionment Article I of the Constitution directs Congress to reapportion—redistribute—the seats in the House after each decennial census. • • • As the United States grew in population, the number of representatives in the House also grew. The Reapportionment Act of 1929 set the “permanent” size of the House at 435 members, and provided for “automatic reapportionment.” Wisconsin lost a seat as a result of the 2000 census (p. 268) Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 2 Current Apportionment Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 2 Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Districts and Gerrymandering • • Under the single-member district arrangement, the voter’s in each district elect one of the State’s representatives. The general-ticket system provided that all of a State’s seats were filled atlarge. - Eliminated in 1842 - Contiguous territory - Equal population - Compact territory Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 • • Districts that have unusual shapes or even defy description have sometimes been gerrymandered. Gerrymandering refers to the act of drawing congressional districts to the advantage of the political party that controls the State legislature. Chapter 10, Section 2 •Top ten most gerrymandered districts •Massachusetts •http://www.propublica.org/article/redistrictinga-devils-dictionary Redistricting in Wisconsin? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Case Study Review • Background • Question before the court • Holding • Implications •Wesberry v. Sanders •Gomillion v. Lightfoot •Bush v. Vera •United Latin American Citizens v.Perry •Hunt v. Cromartie Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Section 2 Homework review and Quiz • • • Compare and contrast the single member district and at large seat. How did Wesberry v. Sanders change the makeup of congress? Since 1910, the ave. number of people in a congressional district has tripled from 210,000 to well over 650,000. How might this have affected the ability of members of congress to represent their constituents? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 SECTION 3 Daily Warm-Up: Translate • “It is indispensable that besides the House of Representatives which runs on all fours with popular sentiment, we should have a body like the Senate which may refuse to run with it at all when it seems to be wrong - A body which has time and security enough to keep it’s head, if only now and then, and but for a little while, till other people have had time to think.” Woodrow Wilson “A necessary fence against the fickleness and passion of the House of Representatives” James Madison Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 3 The Senate Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 SECTION 3 The Senate • How does the size of the Senate differ from the size of the House? • How have States elected senators in the past and present? • How and why does a senator’s term differ from a representative’s term? • What are the qualifications for serving in the Senate? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 3 The Senate • Use the Constitution, Article 1, section 3 (p.13) to answer the following : 1. Number of Senators from each state and how they are to be chosen. 2. Length of term 3. How many are up for re-election every two years? 4. How are vacant seats (between elections) to be filled? 5. Age citizenship and residency requirement? 6. Who will serve as the president of the Senate? Under what conditions may that person vote in the Senate? 7. Who presides over the Senate when the president of the Senate is absent? 8. How did the 17th Amendment (p.20) change the way Senators are chosen ? Facts of Congress Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Size, Election, and Terms • • • • • The Constitution says that the Senate “shall be composed of two Senators from each State.” Today’s Senate consists of 100 Senators. Originally, the Constitution provided that senators were chosen by the State legislatures. In 1912 the Seventeenth Amendment was passed and called for the popular election of senators. Cartoon 278 Senators serve for six-year terms. The Senate is a continuous body, meaning that all of its seats are never up for election at the same time. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 3 The Senate: Facts • • • Go To•The Section: 1Senate 2 in 31939 4 A “continuous body” One-third of the Senate comes up for reelection every two years Senators can run for reelection as often as they desire Qualifications for Senators • The requirements for the U.S. Senate are higher than for the House of Representatives. • The Constitution says that a Senator… Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 5 Chapter 10, Section 3 Qualifications for Senate Membership • • • Must be at least 30 years old Must live in the state he or she represents Must have been a U.S. citizen for at least nine years Go To Section: •The chamber of the U.S. Senate 1 2 3 4 Homework for Wednesday * Read pp. 275 – 278 * Respond to questions 1-6 on 278 Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Homework Review and Quiz 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. A continuous body? Constituency? Why more visible? 17th Amendment Six-Year term? High requirement for expulsion? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 SECTION 4 The Members of Congress • What are the personal and political backgrounds of the current members of Congress? • What are the duties of the job of serving in Congress? • How are members of Congress compensated, and what privileges do they have? Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 4 Representatives of the People Senators and representatives are elected to represent people. As legislators, they have four voting options: Trustees Trustees believe that each question they face must be decided on its merits. Partisans Lawmakers who owe their first allegiance to their political party are partisans. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Delegates Delegates see themselves as agents of the people who elected them. Politicos Politicos attempt to combine the basic elements of the trustee, delegate, and partisan roles. Chapter 10, Section 4 • You have been elected to serve as the representative of Wisconsin’s 7th congressional district. How do you see yourself?...As a trustee, a delegate, a partisan or a politico? Explain Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Committee Membership and Public Servants • • • As committee members, senators and representatives screen proposed laws before they are voted on. Another vital part of their committee work involves the oversight function. Oversight is the the process by which Congress, through its committees, checks to see that the agencies of the executive branch are working effectively. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 • • Members of the House and the Senate also act as servants of their constituents. Requests from voters vary widely, and members of Congress take heed to many of them. Ignoring their constituencies would not bode well in the next election. Chapter 10, Section 4 Compensation Base Pay - $174,000 Senate Leadership majority Party Leader - $193,400 minority Party Leader - $193,400 House Leadership Speaker - $223,500 majority Leader - $193,400 minority Leader - $193,400 • • The franking privilege allows members of Congress to mail letters and other materials postage-free by substituting their facsimile signature (frank) for the postage. The Constitution says that Congress fixes its own “compensation.” Therefore, the only real limits to congressional pay are the President’s veto and fear of voter backlash against a pay increase. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 Chapter 10, Section 4 Membership Privileges • Members of Congress are immune from arrest for non-criminal offenses while engaged in congressional business. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4 • More importantly, the Speech and Debate Clause (Article I, Section 6, Clause 1) protects representatives and senators from suits for libel or slander arising from their official conduct. Chapter 10, Section 4 Homework Review • Members of Congress 1. What does a trustee value most when deciding how to vote on a bill? 2. What does a partisan value most when deciding how to vote on a bill? 3. How does the franking privilege help members of congress? 4. What is the oversight function? Case Study: Hutchinson v. Proxmire Questions for discussion. Go To Section: 1 2 3 4