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Shaw v. Reno
1993 case on racial gerrymandering
Incumbent Advantages
Name recognition, fundraising ability, casework and constituent services, gerrymandered safe districts
Casework
Helping constituents with federal agencies, done by members of Congress
Political Polarization
Growing ideological differences between parties, leads to gridlock and fewer compromises
Trend Toward Political Polarization
Parties becoming more ideologically homogeneous, increased media influence and party primaries
Bill Becomes Law Without President Signature
If the President does nothing for 10 days while Congress is in session, bill automatically becomes law
Bicameralism Creation
Great Compromise at Constitutional Convention, House based on population; Senate equal representation
Members of Congress vs General Population
More wealthy, educated, older; less diverse than general population
Earmarks and Pork Barrel
Funds for local projects to benefit districts, helps incumbents gain support
Stopping a Filibuster
Cloture vote requiring 60 senators
Where Congress Does Most Work
Committees and subcommittees
Vice President Role
President of the Senate, casts tie-breaking votes
Representation Models
Trustee: vote based on judgment; Delegate: vote based on constituency; Politico: combination of both
Article I Section 7
Outlines process for bills and vetoes
Lobbyists and Interest Groups
Provide info, draft bills, influence votes
Gerrymandering
Redrawing districts for political advantage; legal when equal population & race not predominant; illegal racial gerrymandering
Committees Types
Standing: permanent; Select: temporary; Subcommittees: specialized groups
Discharge Petitions
Force a bill out of committee to House floor
Enumerated Powers of Congress
Taxing, spending, declaring war, regulating commerce
House vs Senate
House: larger, rules, revenue bills; Senate: smaller, filibuster, confirmations
Leadership Power Flow
House: Speaker strongest; Senate: Majority Leader most powerful
First-Year Member Power
Join committees, focus on casework, build constituent relationships
House Rules Committee
Sets debate rules, acts as 'traffic cop' for bills
Variable in Elections
Party identification is strongest predictor
Bill Becomes Law
Introduced → committee → floor → other chamber → conference → President
Congress After SCOTUS Strikes Law
Rewrite law or propose constitutional amendment
Impeachment Process
House impeaches by majority; Senate holds trial and convicts with 2/3 vote
Redistricting
Done every 10 years; usually state legislatures draw maps
Tax Bills Originate
House Ways and Means Committee
Legislative Oversight
Monitoring executive agencies
Most Powerful Position
Speaker of the House
House Ways and Means Committee Job
Handles taxes and revenue legislation
Constitutional Provision Broadening Power
Necessary and Proper Clause (Elastic Clause)