1/35
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
bicameralism
the system of having two chambers within one legislative body like the House and Senate in the US Congress
Permanent campaign
the continual quest for reelection that is rooted in high-cost professional campaigns that are increasingly reliant on consultants and expensive media campaigns.
Pork barrel
legislative Appropriations that benefit specific constituents created with the aim of helping local Representatives when re-election.
Descriptive representation
representation in which a member of Congress shares the characteristics such as gender race religion or ethnicity of their constituents.
Substantive representation
representation in which a member of Congress serves constituents interest and shares their policy concerns.
Trustee
A member of Congress who represents constituents' interests will also taking into account National Collective and moral concerns that sometimes cause the member to vote against the preference of a majority of constituents.
delegate
a member of Congress who loyally represents constituent's direct interest.
Politico
A member of Congress who acts as a delegate on issues that constituents care about such as immigration reform and as a trustee on more complex or less Salient issues such as foreign policy or regulatory matters.
Electoral connection
the idea that Congressional behavior is centrally motivated by members desire for re-election.
Casework
assistance provided by members of Congress to their constituents in solving problems with the federal bureaucracy or addressing other specific concerns.
Incumbency advantage
the relative and frequency with which members of Congress are defeated in their attempts for re-election.
Redistricting
Redrawing the geographic boundaries of legislative districts this happens every 10 years to ensure that districts remain roughly equal in population.
apportionment
The process of assigning the 435 seats in the House to the states based on increases or decreases in state population.
Gerrymandering
attempting to use the process of redrawing District boundaries to benefit a political party, protect incumbents or change the proportion of minority voters in a district.
Gridlock
an inability to enact legislation because of partisan conflict within Congress or between Congress and the president.
Logrolling
a form of reciprocity in which members of Congress support bills that they otherwise might not vote for in exchange for other members votes on bills that are very important to them.
Earmarks
federally funded local projects attached to bills passed through Congress.
Seniority
the informal Congressional Norm of choosing the member who has served the longest on a particular committee to be the committee chair.
Speaker of the House
the elected leader of the House of Representatives.
Majority leader
the elected head of the party holding the majority of seats in the house or Senate.
whip system
an organization of house leaders who work to disseminate information and promote party unity in voting on legislation.
Minority leader
the elected head of the party holding the minority of seats in the house or Senate.
President pro tempore
a largely symbolic position usually held by the most senior member of the majority party in the Senate.
Roll call vote
a recorded vote on legislation members may vote 'yes,' 'no,' or 'present' or they may abstain.
Party vote
a vote in which the majority of one party opposes the position of the majority of the other party.
Party Unity
the extent to which members of Congress and the same party vote together on party votes.
Standing committees
committees that are a permanent part of the house or Senate structure holding more importance in Authority than other committees.
Select committees
committees in the house or Senate created to address a specific issue for one or two terms.
Joint committees
committees that contain members of both the House and Senate but have limited Authority.
Conference
committees' temporary committees created to negotiate differences between the House and Senate versions of a piece of legislation that has passed through both Chambers.
Markup
one of the steps through which a bill becomes a law in which the final wording of the bill is determined.
Cloture
a procedure through which the Senate can limit the amount of time spent debating a bill cutting off a filibuster if a super majority of 60 Senators agree.
Filibuster
used by Senators to block a bill by continuing to hold the floor and speak under the Senate rule of unlimited debate until the bill supporters back down.
veto
the president's rejection of a bill that has been passed by Congress and a veto can be overdriven by 2/3 votes in both the House and Senate.
Pocket veto
the automatic death of a bill passed by the House and Senate when the president fails to sign the bill in the last 10 days of a legislative session.
omnibus legislation
large bills that often cover several topics and may contain extraneous or pork barrel projects.