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136 Terms
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Congress
Legislative Branch
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Senate
the upper house of Congress, consisting of two representatives from each state
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House of Representatives
lower house of congress based on state population
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constituencies
a body of voters in a specified area who elect a representative to a legislative body.
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Coalitions
a combination or alliance, especially a temporary one between persons, factions, states
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Term Length
President
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- one term of four years
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- only two terms
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Senate
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- serve six-year terms
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- staggered over even years so that only about 1/3 of the Senate is up for reelection during any election
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HOR
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- two-year terms
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- considered for reelection every even year
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Formal Powers Examples
Veto power, command armed forces, pardoning power, appointment powers, make treaties, convene Congress
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Informal Powers Examples
The power to go public, power of persuasion, make executive agreements, issue executive orders, issue signing statements, create & use bureaucracy, personality and leadership, and make legislative proposals.
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Enumerated Powers
political power specifically delegated to a governmental branch by a constitution
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Implied Powers
powers of U.S. government which have not been explicitly granted by the Constitution but that is implied by the necessary and proper clause to be delegated for the purpose of carrying out the enumerated powers.
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Federal Budget
a plan for the federal government's revenues and spending for the coming year
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Raising Revenue
income tax, cooperate tax, estate tax, customs
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Coining Money
the power of the legislative branch to print money (coins and bills) for use
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Necessary & Proper Clause
constitutional authorization for Congress to make any law required to carry out its powers
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Social Issues
Challenges caused by larger social factors that require collective solutions.
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Debate rules
In the House, the Rules Committee has a lot of power in controlling time and rules of debate.
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In the Senate, there is no Rules Committee, so limits on debate come through unanimous consent, cloture, or filibuster.
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Speaker of the House
the leader of the majority party who serves as the presiding officer of the House of Representatives
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Paul Ryan
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President of Senate
The vice president acts as the president of the Senate. In the vice president's absence, that position is filled by the president pro tempore, who is usually the most senior senator of the majority party.
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Filabuster
the process or an instance of obstructing legislation by means of long speeches and other delaying tactics
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Cloture motion
debate on the topic at hand must end, and a vote is taken immediately.
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Unanimous consent
an agreement by all members present on anything requiring a yes or no decision
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Holds
parliamentary procedure permitted by the Standing Rules of the Senate which allows one or more Senators to prevent a motion from reaching a vote on the Senate floor.
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EXAMPLES
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secret or anonymous hold - Senator told privately.
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Senatorial hold-objects on the Senate floor or the hold is publicly revealed,
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Rules Committee
a legislative committee responsible for expediting the passage of bills.
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Committee of the whole
a device in which a legislative body or other deliberative assembly sits as a single committee with all assembly members being committee members.
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discharge petition
a special tactic used to extract a bill from a committee to have it considered by the entire House
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Treaty Ratification
Senate ratifies a treaty with 2/3 majority
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Confirmation
Senate confirmations became the arena for bitter partisan battles, particularly in regard to appointments to the Supreme Court and to cabinet or sub-cabinet positions.
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Discretionary speding
government spending implemented through an appropriations bill. This spending is an optional part of fiscal policy
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Mandatory spending
Required govt spending by permanent laws
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Entitlement programs
Government benefits that certain qualified individuals are entitled to by law
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Pork Barrel Legislation
The practice of legislators obtaining funds through legislation that favors their home districts.
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logrolling
the practice of exchanging favors, especially in politics by reciprocal voting for each other's proposed legislation.
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partianship
loyalty to a political cause or party
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Ideology
a system of ideas and ideals, especially one which forms the basis of economic or political theory and policy.
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gridlock
A situation in which government is incapable of acting on important issues.
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trustee
exercises his own judgment
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delegate politico
is a representative who acts according to the wishes of his constituents
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curtail
to cut short or reduce
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Presidential veto
When a regular veto is used, the president rejects a bill sent to him/her by Congress. Congress can overturn a regular presidential veto with a 2/3 majority vote of both houses.
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pocket veotes
slightly sneaky way for a president or governor to veto a bill. If Congress gives the president a bill and the president doesn't sign or reject it, the bill isn't passed.
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lame duck
in politics, is an elected official who is approaching the end of their tenure, especially one whose successor has already been elected
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Foreign Policy
a government's strategy in dealing with other nations.
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Commander in chief
A person who is in control of all the armed forces of a nation
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Executive agreements
routine international agreements/pacts w/ foreign Head of State, DO NOT require Senate approval.
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Signing Statments
a statement issued by a president upon the signing of a bill into law by which the president indicates his or her interpretation of the law.
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Executive Branch Appointments
president must seek Senate approval of many different appointments. Once a president appoints the individual, the Senate holds hearings in the appropriate committee, if the committee approves the appointment the name is sent to the full Senate for approval with a simple majority. Called "advice and consent".
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Cabinet Members
Person appointed to head an executive department of the United States Government.
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Ambassadors
an accredited diplomat sent by a country as its official representative to a foreign country.
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White House Staff
The president's personal assistants and advisers
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Life-tenured
service during good behavior is a term of office that lasts for the office holder's lifetime
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Executive order
presidential statements that have the force of law and do not need congressional approval unless appropriations are needed to carry out the order.
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Executive privilege:
power of the president to protect the privacy interests of the executive branch.
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Independent regulatory agencies:
issue regulations, enforce penalties for violations of their regulations. The heads of the independent regulatory agencies are appointed by the president and require Senate approval. Key examples include: FTC, FDA, FCC, OSHA, EPA, CPSC, FEC.
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Government corporations:
non-profit companies owned by the federal government. Key examples: Amtrak, FDIC, TVA, USPS.
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Independent Executive Agencies:
CIA, National Science Foundation, NASA.
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Pendleton Act (1883):
did away with the Jacksonian spoils system, set up merit as the criteria for hiring, promoting, and firing federal employees. Also enforced the regulation that civil service employees could not take part in partisan politics.
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Presidential appointment process:
president must seek Senate approval of many different appointments. Once a president appoints the individual, the Senate holds hearings in the appropriate committee, if the committee approves the appointment the name is sent to the full Senate for approval with a simple majority. Called "advice and consent".
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Formal qualifications for the President:
35 years old, natural-born citizen, resident of the US for 14 years.
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civil service
the group of people whose job it is to carry out the work of the government
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Merit system
A system of employment based on qualifications, test scores, and ability, rather than party loyalty
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State of the Union
a yearly address delivered each January by the president of the US to Congress, giving the administration's view of the state of the nation and plans for legislation.
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Bully pulpit
a position of authority or public visibility, especially a political office, from which one may express one's views (President)
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Reforms
Political changes to make things better
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Rule making authority
process by which federal agencies implement legislation passed by Congress and signed into law by the President.
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Precedents
How similar cases have been decided in the past.
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Stare decisis
In court rulings, a reliance on past decisions or precedents to formulate decisions in new cases
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Judicial activism
the practice in the judiciary of protecting or expanding individual rights through decisions that depart from established precedent or are independent of or in opposition to supposed constitutional or legislative intent — compare judicial restraint.
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Judicial Restraint
theory of judicial interpretation that encourages judges to limit the exercise of their own power. It asserts that judges should hesitate to strike down laws unless they are obviously unconstitutional,
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Expansive Interpretation
liberal interpretation that employs a statutory provision (expand on the subject matter of the statute, or law, to provide more information about who the law applies to, when it applies and what the penalties are for violating it) to a case involving ambiguity in its literal words.
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Marbury v Madison
forms the basis for the exercise of judicial review in the United States under Article III of the Constitution
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Judicial Review
The power of a court to determine the constitutionality of a governmental action
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Federalist \# 78
Hamilton begins by telling the readers that this paper will discuss the importance of an independent judicial branch and the meaning of judicial review. The Constitution proposes the federal judges hold their office for life, subject to good behavior.
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appropriation
refers to the act of designating a certain amount of money for a specific use. The term is often used in reference to budgeting and the creation of spending bills.
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Article III
judicial branch of the federal government. The judicial branch comprises the Supreme Court of the United States and lower courts as created by Congress.
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Dept Homeland
responsible for protecting the United States and its territory from terrorism and large-scale disasters, and for responding to such events when they occur. It was established in 2002 in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
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Dept of Transportation
Office of the Secretary and eleven individual Operating Administrations:
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the Federal Aviation Administration,
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the Federal Highway Administration,
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the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the Federal Railroad Administration,
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the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the Federal Transit Administration,
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the Maritime Administration,
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the Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation,
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the Research and Innovative Technologies Administration,
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the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration,