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How does the power of the Texas lieutenant governor compare to the powers of lieutenant governors in other states?
The Texas lieutenant governor is very strong by comparison.
What was the effect of extending the length of the lieutenant governor’s term of office from two to four years?
It allowed lieutenant governors to gain more informal influence and legislative expertise.
Which of the following powers allows the lieutenant governor to influence the choices the senate makes?
the power to appoint committees to the senate
To what extent does the Texas attorney general (AG) handle criminal issues?
The AG supports and advises city- and county-level officials in promoting awareness on crime and safety issues.
What is the impact of the attorney general on public policy?
When the attorney general issues an opinion on public policy, it carries the force of law.
What does Texas’s balanced budget requirement entail?
By law, the state legislature cannot adopt a budget that exceeds anticipated revenue.
What does it take to override the comptroller?
a four-fifths majority in both houses of the legislature
How is the comptroller of public accounts involved in the Texas budget?
The comptroller provides a revenue forecast and ensures that the budget passed by the legislature is within that revenue estimate.
What office does the land commissioner head?
the General Land Office
Why is revenue from state lands so important?
Texas collects no income tax and uses a portion of oil and gas royalties to fund public education.
Which office has been criticized for placing business interests ahead of environmental concerns?
the Land Office
Who is responsible for regulating the oil and gas industry in Texas?
the Texas Railroad Commission
Why does Texas have a State Board of Education (SBOE)?
The Texas Constitution designates the SBOE to implement the mandate for a free public education system.
Education officials assert that the SBOE has no jurisdiction over how local school districts teach the state curriculum. Which of the following represents some evidence that this assertion might not be true?
A court order blocked a school district from using the now publicly available lessons produced by CSCOPE.
How is the State Board of Education selected?
Most of its members are elected by voters, but some positions are appointed by the governor.
What is the primary role of the Texas secretary of state?
administering elections
Who is the highest-ranking official appointed by the governor in Texas?
the secretary of state
The Texas Public Utilities Commission has jurisdiction over which public utilities?
telephone and electric power companies
Which agency was criticized for the statewide power outages that occurred in February 2021?
the Electric Reliability Council of Texas
What is one of the main characteristics of a perfect bureaucracy?
It assigns responsibilities based on technical competence.
How did people obtain bureaucratic jobs in the 19th century?
Jobs were awarded based on political allegiance.
Bureaucracies rely on complex procedures to make sure that laws are consistent and fair across a wide range of situations. What is the end result of this?
There is an inherent degree of complexity involved in bureaucracies, which tends to make citizens frustrated because things often take longer than expected.
Why is the state bureaucracy decentralized?
to disperse power
Why does Texas have a sizable bureaucracy (in numerical terms) despite its commitment to small government?
A certain amount of bureaucracy is necessary to establish the basic delivery of goods and services that government provides.
what describes the purpose of state bureaucracy?
to provide services to the population and to implement state policies
The Sunset review process demonstrates that state agencies are ultimately held accountable for their performance by whom?
The legislative branch, as house and senate members vote on all Sunset bills
What is the lieutenant governor’s responsibility when the governor is out of state?
serving as acting governor
The senate president pro tempore becomes acting governor for the day during ___
the “governor for a day” ritual
The process of accusing an official of misconduct while in office is known as what?
impeachment
The governor has a limited ___
set of formal powers to influence the political process
Historically speaking, why did the Texas Constitution of 1876 limit the powers of the governor?
It was a reaction to the previous constitution, which had given the governor strong executive powers
What effect does the plural executive have on governors?
It weakens governors by allowing the electorate to choose their executive officers for them
How many appointees does a governor choose over the course of a single term?
several hundred
Governors make appointments for what?
pursuit of policy goals, protect those who share same political interests, and to establish a political tone
How is the governor’s appointment power limited?
Senatorial courtesy allows the senator from the district of a nominee to veto the governor’s appointment.
What happens to someone who is appointed to office by a governor while the legislature is not in session?
The appointee’s tenure is still subject to senate confirmation once the legislature reconvenes
What happens when a governor vetoes a bill?
It is returned to the legislature, where the veto can be overridden by a two-thirds vote of each chamber
How has Governor Abbott’s use of the veto compare to other Texas governors?
higher-than average despite working with a Republican legislature
What authority does the governor have over the state budget?
The governor can transfer money between programs or agencies in an emergency
What are the governor’s military and police powers?
The governor is commander in chief of the Texas National Guard and has limited police powers as selector of the Public Safety Commission
What opportunity do governors in Texas have to influence the state judiciary?
Governors can fill judicial vacancies
Who has power to issue a pardon?
the Board of Pardons and Paroles
The governor has important powers, which include ___
the power to persuade and the message power
What does the “power to persuade” mean when used in reference to the Texas governor?
It refers to the governor’s use of personal influence to manage relationships with the legislature and the bureaucracy during the session
Why is the informal side of the message power more important than the formal side?
The governor’s formal messages can be ignored, whereas statements receive extensive media coverage
What is one limitation of using approval ratings to measure the current standing of the governor?
Polls rarely contain information regarding the reasoning behind people’s opinions
What is the bully pulpit?
A figurative platform public official uses to build support for their agenda
The governor’s emergency items are officially submitted to who?
the house and senate
What describes Abbott’s emergency items from the 85th Legislative Session?
They identified general policy areas
How did the Texas Legislature respond to the governor’s emergency items?
The senate acted quickly, but the house was slower in passing legislation
Why did members of the house pass legislation to reform Child Protective Services
they had no choice
Emergency item that was the least successful
immigration
Both the United States and Texas use the common law system. What does it rely on?
written laws as well as judges’ interpretations of those laws over time
What does the common law system being built on precedent mean?
The law of all states must conform to the Constitution mean for the states
Law made by municipal and county governments
ordinances
What would happen if cases were decided based on written law alone?
Inconsistencies might emerge in the rulings on similar cases
Just like the state itself, the Texas court system is
very large and complex
What does it mean for a court to have original jurisdiction over a case?
The court has the authority to hear the case first, before any other court
Example of concurrent jurisdiction
both local police and the FBI having the authority to deal with a case
Appellate Jurisdiction
the court hears cases that were originally tried in other courts
What is true about appeals process?
No new facts or evidence may be introduced during an appeal
What is the focus of appellate courts?
court procedures
How many municipal courts were there in Texas in 2020?
945
What county trial courts has appellate jurisdiction over cases appealed from other courts?
constitutional county courts
What is true about Texas district courts?
The Texas Constitution was amended to give the legislature the power to create additional courts of appeals
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has discretion to hear criminal appeals and does not have to hear all cases, with what exception?
capital punishment cases
The Texas Supreme Court has final jurisdiction over what type of cases appealed through the state courts?
civil cases
In using partisan elections to select judges, Texas ___
prizes accountability over independence in the judiciary
What two characteristics allow judges to make the kind of unbiased and well-reasoned decisions necessary for a credible justice system?
capability and independence
What is based on the idea that encouraging lawyers to pursue the best interests of their respective clients is the best way for the system to ensure justice?
the adversarial system
What two sources set the formal requirements to serve as a state judge in Texas?
The Texas Constitution and the Texas Legislature
Do all Texas judges have to be licensed to practice law?
No, constitutional county court judges and justices of the peace do not have to be licensed to practice law
What judges have to satisfy the most rigorous requirements before they can assume their posts?
appeals court judges
As of October 2020, how many judges on the Texas Supreme Court were women?
4
Municipal judges serve terms of what length?
2 years
What happens if there is a judicial vacancy outside of the normal electoral calendar?
The vacancy is filled by someone appointed by the relevant elected official
What is the purpose of the Commission on Judicial Conduct?
to consider whether a judge has violated the Code of Judicial Conduct
How does the Texas Code of Judicial Conduct affect judicial campaigns?
No effect because judges discuss their political ideology
What do believers in the Hamiltonian approach to government argue?
Judges cannot be independent if they’re worried about reelection
Why are independence and accountability considered contradictory goals with respect to judges
accountability limits independence
What concern was of primary importance to the drafters of the Texas Constitution when creating the judicial selection system?
the accountability of judges
What allows judges to focus on cases that will contribute something meaningful to the collective understanding of the law?
The principle of discretionary review
What is one important reason why the Texas Supreme Court may be susceptible to improper influence by moneyed interests?
The court does not reveal how the justices voted in each decision to accept or reject a petition for appeal
Most recent attempt to overhaul the present system for filing judicial posts
2003
Ex-officio member
Board or commission members who automatically serve because of some other position they occupy
senatorial courtesy
An informal custom of the Texas Senate that senators may reject gubernatorial nominees from their own districts
line-item veto
The governor’s power to veto specific items in the legislature’s budget bill rather than the whole bill
Statutory laws
Bills that the Texas Legislature made into laws