Unit 4: The Institutions EVERY TERM EVERY BRANCH

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90 Terms

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Formal power

Power delegated to a branch of government explicitly listed in the U.S. Constitution

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Informal power

Powers not listed in the U.S. Constitution but implied or granted

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Bicameral

Two-house legislature

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Senate

Designed to represent states equally; has 100 members and debate is less formal than the House; one-third elected every two years; bills typically reach the floor by unanimous consent; senators can request a hold, filibuster, or motion for cloture

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House of Representatives

Designed to represent the people; has 435 members; debate is more formal; all members elected every two years; revenue bills originate here; Rules Committee sets debate rules; may form a Committee of the Whole or use a discharge petition

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Federal budget

Generated by Congress to address both mandatory and discretionary spending

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Oversight

Congressional authority to ensure laws are implemented as intended through review, investigation, hearings, and power of the purse

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Speaker of the House

Elected by a majority of House members and presides over legislative work in the House

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Bill

A draft or proposed law in Congress

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Committee

Group that conducts hearings, debates, and mark-ups; leadership determined by majority party; most bills die in committee

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Committee hearing

Gathering of evidence and testimony before full chamber debate and vote

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Mark up

Revisions or additions to a bill during committee consideration

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Rules Committee

Establishes debate rules for House bills

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Committee of the Whole

Formed in the House to expedite debate on bills

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Discharge petition

Allows a House member to bring a bill to the floor; rarely used

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Unanimous consent

Typical Senate procedure to bring bills to the floor for debate and vote

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Hold

Request by a senator to prevent a bill from reaching the floor

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Filibuster

Tactic to prolong debate and delay or block a vote on a bill

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Cloture

Procedure to end debate in the Senate

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Conference committee

Reconciles differences between House and Senate versions of a bill

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Mandatory spending

Spending required by law for entitlement programs like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid

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Entitlements

Government-provided benefits or services to which individuals are legally entitled

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Social Security

Federal program providing retirement, disability, and survivor benefits funded by payroll taxes

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Medicare

Federal health insurance program for qualified elderly Americans

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Medicaid

Federal and state health program for low-income households

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Discretionary spending

Annual spending approved for defense, education, and infrastructure

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Infrastructure

Government-built and maintained facilities and utilities such as roads, bridges, and water systems

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Pork barrel

Funding for local projects added to larger appropriations bills

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Logrolling

Trading votes or combining legislation to gain passage

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Partisan voting

When legislators vote based on party affiliation

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Polarization

Movement of political attitudes toward ideological extremes

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Gridlock

Inability of Congress to act due to lack of consensus

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Reapportionment

Redistribution of congressional seats based on the U.S. Census every ten years

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Redistricting

Redrawing congressional district boundaries by state legislatures

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Gerrymandering

Redrawing districts to give one party an unfair advantage

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Divided government

One party controls the presidency and another controls at least one chamber of Congress

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Lame duck

Outgoing politician still in office until successor takes over

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Trustee representative

Representative who votes using their own judgment and expertise

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Delegate representative

Representative who votes according to constituents' preferences

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Politico representative

Representative who alternates between trustee and delegate roles

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Policy agenda

List of issues the government agrees to consider for policymaking

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Cabinet

Advisory group to the president made up of department heads and the vice president

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Executive Office of the President (EOP)

Offices supporting the president's agenda, including the White House Office, NSC, and OMB

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Veto

President's formal rejection of a bill; may be overridden by two-thirds of Congress

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Pocket veto

President lets a bill expire without signing it; cannot be overridden

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Line item veto

Now-unconstitutional presidential power to veto specific parts of a bill

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Commander in Chief

President's formal power to lead the armed forces

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Executive agreement

Informal presidential agreement with another nation without Senate ratification

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Treaty

Formal international agreement requiring Senate approval

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Bargaining and persuasion

President's informal power to secure congressional support

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Executive order

Presidential directive managing the federal government; implied by executive power or congressional delegation

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Signing statement

President's interpretation or intention regarding a newly signed law

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Senate confirmation

Senate's check on presidential appointments for key positions and judgeships

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Congressional agenda

Set of issues Congress considers; conflicts with the president's agenda may prompt executive action

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Federalist 70

Argues for a single, energetic executive to ensure effective governance and protection of liberty

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22nd Amendment

Limits presidents to two terms, reflecting fear of excessive executive power

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State of the Union

Formal presidential address to Congress and the nation to outline policy priorities

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Bully pulpit

President's use of media and public visibility to shape national agenda

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Agenda setting

Process by which the president uses formal and informal powers to influence policy priorities

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Article III

Establishes the judicial branch and life tenure for federal judges

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Federalist 78

Argues for judicial independence and life tenure as checks on the other branches

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Judicial review

Power of courts to declare laws or executive actions unconstitutional

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Precedent

Legal principle established by previous court decisions

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Stare decisis

Doctrine that courts should follow precedent in similar cases

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Jurisdiction

Legal authority of a court to hear cases

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Original jurisdiction

Authority of a court to hear a case first

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Appellate jurisdiction

Authority to review cases decided by lower courts

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Judicial activism

Belief that courts should use judicial review to promote justice and policy change

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Judicial restraint

Belief that courts should defer to precedent and elected branches

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Federal bureaucracy

Network of departments and agencies implementing and enforcing federal laws and regulations

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Regulation

Rules issued by agencies to implement congressional laws

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Executive department

Major division of the executive branch led by a secretary appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate

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Executive agency

Independent agency outside executive departments created to manage specific functions (e.g., EPA, NASA, CIA)

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Independent regulatory agency / commission

Agency that regulates industries and operates independently from presidential control (e.g., FEC, SEC, Fed)

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Government corporation

Government-owned business providing public services (e.g., USPS, Amtrak, FDIC)

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Issue network

Temporary alliances among various actors to influence policy

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Iron triangle

Stable relationship among congressional committees, bureaucratic agencies, and interest groups in policymaking

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Merit system

Hiring and promotion based on qualifications and performance

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Patronage

Hiring based on political loyalty rather than merit

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Discretionary power

Authority granted to agencies to interpret and implement laws

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Rule-making authority

Power of bureaucratic agencies to create and enforce regulations

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Department of Homeland Security

Handles public security, terrorism, borders, and disaster response

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Department of Transportation

Manages national transportation systems and infrastructure projects

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Department of Veterans Affairs

Provides health care and benefits to military veterans

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Department of Education

Oversees federal education programs and policies

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Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

Regulates environmental protection and public health standards

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Federal Elections Commission (FEC)

Enforces campaign finance laws in federal elections

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Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)

Regulates and enforces laws governing financial markets and investors

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Power of the purse

Congress's ability to fund or defund programs to control the bureaucracy

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Compliance monitoring

Ensures that bureaucratic agencies properly use funds and follow regulations