Unit 4 - Gov Institutions
Congress
Bicameral Congress - House of Reps and Senate- Why?
History - the British Parliament had 2 houses and most colonial legislatures were also bicameral
fought the revolutionary war → created the articles of confederation → Connecticut compromise: large states want representation and small states want equal representation → the House of reps is proportional and the senate is equal representation
federalism - the house of reps represents the interest of the people and the senate represents the interests of the state
the bicameral legislatures also fragmented power and checked majority interests
it also shows the legislative process → encourages careful deliberation and compromise
House vs Senate
House - represents the people
435 members
2 year terms (no term limits)
a representative must be 25 years old and American citizen for 7 years and a resident from the state from which her or she is elected
always been elected by the people
initiates revenue bills - the power of the purse, brings charges over the impeachments (at he conclusion of a investigation there is a possibility that something bad was done), chooses the president when the electoral college is deadlocked (because they are closer to the people)
Senate - represent the state
100 members
6 year terms (no term limits) - a continuous body
a senator must be 30 years old and American citizen for 9 years and a resident from the state from which her or she is elected
originally chosen by the state legislators until the 17th amendment allowed or the direct election of senators
easily bribed
ratifies treaties negotiated by the president, posses the sole power to try to judge impeachment cases, confirms judicial(appointments to the supreme court) and executive appointments
House of Reps
the number of seats is going to be apportioned by the population - reapportioned after a census is taken - each state has at least 1
the cap of members is 435
reapportionment is tied to the issue of redistricting which happens every 10 years as a census is taken
Baker vs Carr
Districts and gerrymandering
the constitution does not define or discuss congressional districts, but in 1842, congress decided that all the seats in the house will be filed from single member districts
1842 each state was given the responsibility to drawing the boundary lines of its congressional districts which gave way to the practice of gerrymandering
gerrymandering is when the majority party in each state legislature redraws congressional districts to ensure the maximum number of seats for its own candidates
protects incumbents and discourages challenges
strengthens the majority party
decreases minority representation
in rare cases an increase in minority rep - Shaw vs Reno which happens in 1990
Supreme Court and redistricting
rural areas dominated many state legislatures, so districts often favored less populated rural areas of a state
Baker vs Carr set forth the principle of “one person, one vote” in drawing congressional districts - this case triggers widespread redistricting and gave cities and suburban areas representation in congress
according to the supreme court
districts must be populated, compact and lines must be contiguous
redistricting cannot dilute minority voting strength
district lines cannot be drawn based solely on race
supreme court has not eliminated gerrymandering for partisan political purposes
How congress is organized: the role of the parties
political parties play a key role in the organization of both houses of congress
the majority party is the party in each chamber with the most votes
the majority party enjoys the following advantages
hold the committee chairs
it chooses the speaker of the house
assigns bills to each committee
holds the majority on each committee
controls the house of rules of committee
sets the legislative agenda
Organization of congress
House
more formal structure and stricter rules
the speaker of the house
presides over the house and oversee and all business
2nd in line for presidential succession - speaker of the house
other leaders
majority and minority leaders
party whips
Senate
more freedom with debate and less formal
the vice president
head of the senate and casts the tie-breaking vote
in their absence, the pro Tempore runs business
other leaders
the majority leader - the true leader of the senate
minority
The Committee System
importance
both the house and the senate are divided into committees
they play a dominant role in policy making
they are important to the house because of how large the house is (435 members)
standing committees
permanent bodies that continue from one congress to the next
they focus on legislation in a particular area such as foreign relations or agriculture
heavy reliance on lobbyist as they are policy experts
other committees
select committees are formed for a specific purpose for a limited time - are usually formed to investigate a current matter of great public concern
ex. oil and energy use
joint committees include members of both houses and often focus attention on major issues
formed in desperate times like COVID
conference committees - temporary bodies that are formed to resolve differences between the house and the senate versions of a bill
The House Rules Committee and Ways and Means
Jermain - on topic with the bill
rules of committee is controlled by the speaker - it is often called the “traffic cop” or the speakers “right arm”
it sets the guidelines for floor debate - it gives each bill a rule that puts the bill on the calendar limits the time for debate and determines the type of amendments that will be allowed
closed rule sets strict time limits on debates and forbids amendments from the floor
an open rule has less strict time limits and permits amendments from the floor
The Ways and Means Committee has jurisdiction on all taxation, tariffs and other revenue sharing measures - this is an exclusive committee
Committee Chairs
are chosen by the speaker of the house
they exercise great power and enjoy considerable prestige
they call meetings, schedule hearings, hire staff, recommend majority members to sit on conference committees and select all subcommittee chairs
historically the chairs were chosen by a seniority system where the majority party member with the most continuous service become the chair - now the speaker has more control
Legislative process
approximately 5000 bills are introduced each year
only 125 are made to law
the bicameral congress and its complex committee system present a formidable series of legislative obstacles that defeat most bills
the legislative process is supposed to be slow - by negotiation and compromise
Creating Bills
anyone can write a bill
most bills are not written by congress
most bills originate in the executive branch
business, labor, agriculture, and other interest groups often draft bills
only members of congress can introduce bill - they drop them into the hopper(a box hanging on the edge of the clerks desk
filibuster is more possible in the senate rather than the house of reps because the house has more members which require more rules
Committee Action
the house and the senate have parallel processes
bills are assigned a number and then sent to the appropriate committee - from there it is sent to a subcommittee for study hearings revisions and approval
most bills die in committee where they are pigeonholed or buried
if the majority of the house wishes to force a pigeonholed bill out of committee it can use a discharge petition signed by a majority of the house members
bills approved by a subcommittee then return to the full committee - where members can mark up or add items to the bill
committees can reject a bill or send it to the house or senate floor with a positive recommendation
Floor action
House
the rules committees gives the bill a rule - placing in on the legislative calendar allowing a specified time for debate and determining if any amendments will be allowed
the bill is debated and a vote is ultimately taken by the full house
Senate
members may speak on the floor as long as they wish
a filibuster is a way of delaying or preventing action on a bill by using long speeches and unlimited debate to “take a bill to death”
filibusters can be stopped by a cloture vote of 60 senators to cut off debate
they are so successful - most important bills are no longer require a simple majority of 51 votes
they need a supermajor of 60 → so that cloture can easily be invoked
additionally a senator may place a hold, a parliamentary procedure where the senator asks to be informed before a bill is brought to the floor → this stalls action
How Members Vote
delegate model
vote is cast to reflect the majority of their constituents
trustee model
members use their best judgement to make policy in the best interests of the people
politico model
members wavier between taking care of your people or between the delegate and the trustee depending on the issue
Congressional oversight
refers to the congressional review of the activities of an executive agency department
the senate exercises special oversight functions by confirming cabinet heads and presidential appointments to federal courts
advice and consent power
methods of oversight - a check that congress ha over congressional oversight
setting guidelines for new agencies
holding hearing and conducting investigations
using budgets control
reorganizing the agency
evaluating an agencies programs
Foreign policy
the constitutional division of power
congress has the power to declare war - the senate has the power to ratify the treaties
president has the power to wage war and the power to negotiate treaties
war powers resolution
passed by congress in 1973: designed to make sure Congress can check the presidents war waging power as commander and chief
the president must notify congress within 48 hours of deploying troops - congress can request the pres. to bring home troops within 60-90 days
Reducing power and perks
term limits for congress?
new ethics laws
organizational changes
ex. one person can recall the speaker → long term problems
pork-barrel legislation - you promise people money for a project in order to maintain the vote in your favor
franking privilege - free mail if you already sit in congress
you can keep your name fresh in people’s mind → the know the name when it comes to reelection
The Presidency
there are qualifications and benefits when becoming president
the constitution has placed no limit on the number of terms a president might serve until 1951
the 22nd amendment placed limits on presidential terms
a president may not be elected more than twice or once if they became president due to succession
The President As Chief Executive
executive power
chief executive - has to execute the law
this power shall be vested into the power of the president of the US
he has to be honorable to the laws that are passed
the president enforces federal laws and administer bureaucracy
the chief bureaucrat
appointment power
president has the power to appoint the following:
cabinet members
supreme court, US Marshalls, and attorneys
the heads of independent agencies
ambassadors and other diplomats
the appointments are subject to review by the senate
removal power
presidents have the power to remove most officials without senate approval
the president cannot dismiss federal judges or commissioners of independent regulatory agencies
Cabinet
the cabinet includes 15 executive departments and employ nearly 2/3 of the federal gov civilian employees
they are academically talented at their chosen field
cabinet members often have divided loyalties
loyalty to the president and to the institutional goals of their own departments
the president can have a difficult time controlling cabinet departments bc:
interest groups often form close ties with cabinet departments and the congressional committees
the careers of many civil servants extend beyond a single presidential administration so they develop strong loyalty to their department
congress competes with the president for influence over the cabinet departments
The executive office of president
The office of management and budget
the OMB is the largest office within the executive office
it has a staff of over 500 and has to assist the president in overseeing the preparation of the federal budget
they have to work out compromises the CBO - who also comes up with a federal budget
the national security council
the NSC is composed of the president’s principal foreign and military advisors
the vp, secretary of state, secretary of the treasury, secretary of defense, national security advisor
they advise and assist the pres. on national security and foreign policy
The Council of Economic Advisors
CEA is 3 economists that try to advise the pres. on economic policy
ex. what happens when COVID hits and production and shipment slow down → could lead to a recession → the CEA help guide the pres.
The White House Staff
chief of staff and the press secretary
the COS is the highest ranking person in the executive office of the president
they would have to supervise key white house staff and managing the flow of people and information into the oval office
the staff must be personally loyal to the pres
the president can appoint and dismiss members of his staff without the senate approval
the staff’s primary responsibility is to present the pres with policy options and analysis
The President as Chief Legislator
legislative power
give the state of union address to congress each year
he can brin issues to the attention of congress “from time to time”
he can veto congressional legislation - veto power
president use their role as national leader and the head of the party to set the policy agenda
initiates much of the legislation that congress considers
Veto Power
a pres can veto a bill but congress can override with 2/3 vote in each chamber
the pres can wait 10 full days and if congress is still in session the bill will become a law without the pres signature
the pres can exercise a pocket veto by waiting 10 full days - if congress adjourns before the 10 days are up → the bill will die
pres often use the threat of a veto to persuade congress to modify a bill
a bill is often revised and then passed in another form
pres must accept or reject the entire bill
Working with Congress
most pres. prefer to establish a cooperative bipartisan relationship with congress
assign liaisons to lobby legislators
work with the majority an minority leaders
use the media to focus public attention on important issues
use high presidential approval ratings to persuade legislators to support presidential programs
bargain with wavering legislators by offering concessions and pork that will benefit a members district
Ordinance power
the president has the power to issue executive orders
this order is a directive rule or regulation that has the effect of the law
the power to issued these orders comes from the constitution and the acts of congress
although the ordinance power is not specifically mention the ordinance power - it is intended to imply power stemming from the take care clause
the size of gov has caused congress to delegate more and more discretion to the pres and presidential subordinates
Divided government
congress are controlled by different parties or the two chambers of congress are controlled by different parties
heightens partisanship → makes it harder to negotiate compromises
leads to lower approval ratings for people of congress and the president
leads to gridlock
it poses a problem for the pres in making federal appointments → stricter committee scrutiny, narrows the filed of potential candidates and can spark character attacks on nominees
presidents try to overcome these problems
using the media to generate public support
threatening to veto objectionable legislation
making deals with key congressional leaders
building coalitions with key interests groups
increasing reliance on white house staff
Formal Constitutional Powers
the president is the commander and chief and has the power to deploy the troops
Korean war, Vietnam war, Persian gulf war and the Iraq war
the president appoints all ambassadors subject to senate confirmation
the president has the power to appoint justices to the supreme court and all other federal judges
the president gets to negotiate treaties which are subject to Senate ratification
the president has the sole power to recognize nations
the president receives ambassadors and other public ministers
the president has the power to grant reprieves and pardons
Informal powers
the president can negotiate executive agreements with the heads of the foreign governments
terminate after the pres term is over
the pres. is recognized as the global leader who meets world leaders to build international coalitions
the pres is expected to manage international crises
the pres has access to confidential information not available to congress or the public
President as Chief Diplomat
congress typically defers to the pres when it comes to foreign affairs
the pres can both extend and terminate diplomatic relations with foreign nations
the pres has the power to negotiate treaties with other nations and then they are subject to a 2/3 vote in the senate
the senate rejected the treaties of Versailles ending WW1 but approved of Carter’s Panama Canal Treaty
pres rely more on executive agreements than formal treaties bc they do not need congressional approval
these are not binding on future pres as they are not part of American law
The Importance of Public Support and Approval Ratings
public support is crucial to presidential success
there is still a score keeper that just tells us what the pres is doing and how well he is doing it
these things increase approval
there is a brief honeymoon periods at the beginning of the new administration
positive media coverage of presidential activities and decisions
foreign policy success
foreign crises that produce the “rally around the flag effect”
strong economic growth and low unemployment
these things decrease approval
scandals that involve the pres and/or top ideas
a ap between high expectations and low job performance
foreign wars that go badly over a protracted period of time
weak economic growth and high unemployment
Importance of the Media
media plays a crucial role in influencing how the public perceives the pres
the gate keeper role
the pres is generally more successful than congressional leaders in using the media to set the policy agenda
the pres has an advantage over congress in the following ways:
the pres represents the whole entire nation but congress represents their own districts or state
the pres is the leader of the “free world”
the pres is more powerful than any individual member of congress
the pres speaks with a single voice but congress speaks with the competing voices of 365 members
Presidential Transition
the vice president
impeachment
problems of succession
lame duck
Presidential Disability
sections 3 and 4a of the 25th amendment provide procedures to follow when the president is disabled
the vp is to become acting pres if
the president informs congress that power will temporarily be in control
the vp and majority of the members of the cabinet inform congress that the president is incapacitated
Bureaucracy
large complex organization of appointed officials
the FD includes all agencies, people, and procedures through which the federal government operates
there are about 2.7 million civilian and 1.4 million military federal gov employees
half of all the civilian employees work for the department of defense and an additional 28% work for the postal service
key features:
hierarchical authority - a chain of command in which authority flows from the top down
job specialization - each employee has defined duties and responsibilities
formal rules - all employees must follow established procedures
Growth of Bureaucracy
the spoils system
a group of elite, upper-class white males
Andrew Jackson awarded federal posts to a party loyalists
civil service
Pendleton Act of 1883 created the federal civil service
workers are hired based on merit not party loyalty
the office of personnel management administers all civil service laws and regulations as well as hires for most federal agencies
federal and state employees
the # of federal employees has remained constant
since 1950
block grants have shifted resources from the federal to the state government → increasing the number of state employees
federal mandates have also shifted responsibilities to the states → increases the need for state employees
The Cabinet Departments Review
the advice and consent power gives the senate the power to go over the pres. appointments and treaties
there are 15 cabinet departments - each department is headed by a secretary
all 15 heads are chosen by the pres. and approved by the senate
the treasury department has authority over the printing of currency
cabinet secretaires often develop a strong loyalty to their departments → cabinets are often not close presidential advisors
Independent Regulatory Agencies
created to protect the public by regulating key sectors of the society
the Interstate Commerce Commission is one of the best known regulatory agencies
these agencies are led by small commissions appointed by the pres. and confirmed by the senate
commissioners cannot be removed by the pres during their terms of office
the federal reserve board
set monetary policy: setting bank interest rates, controlling inflation, regulating the money supply, and adjusting bank reserve requirements
FED has great independence which is meant to remove monetary policy from politics
Other parts
gov corporations
provide service that could be provided by the private sector
the corporations for public broadcasting, Amtrak, and the US postal service are the best known government agencies
independent executive agencies
includes most of all the non-cabinet departments
NASA, NSF, EPA, GSA are independent executive agencies
Implementing gov laws
translation of policy goals into rules and standard operating procedures
the process can be questionable because of
conflicting goals
faulty program design
lack of financial resources
fragmentation of responsibilities
some federal agencies are doing the same thing so another thing is not getting done
Interest groups and the Bureaucracy
iron triangles
an alliance among an administrative agency an interest group and a congressional committee
these are sometimes called sub governments because they are so powerful
issue networks
includes policy experts, media pundits, congressional staffs, interest groups who regularly debate an issue
the pres often fills agency positions with people from an issue network who shares their views
Characteristics of the federal courts
adversarial - there are 2 parties that bring their conflicts before an impartial arbiter or judge - one must have standing
standing = the ability to show the effect or the damage of something that has happened directly to you or someone directly related
the plaintiff brins the chare and the defendant is the one being charged
passive - federal judges are constrained by the constitution to deciding actual despites rather than the hypothetical
passive branch of the gov that depends on others to take initiative
jurisdiction - the court’s authority to hear a case
original - courts that where the case is first heard
appellate - courts that have the case brought to them on appeal for a lower court
exclusive - cases can only be heard in certain courts
concurrent - cases that can be heard in either a federal or a state court
Federal Court system
congress has the power to create all lower courts
the judiciary act of 1789 established the basic three tiered structure that still exits and also sets the number of supreme court justices at 6 which was later expanded to 9
district court
there are 94 district courts staffed by about 700 judges
courts of appeals
review all district court decisions
rule on decisions from the federal regulatory agencies
do not hold trials or hear testimony
supreme court
America’s court of last resort
hears the cases from the lower appeal courts and the state supreme courts
is the final arbiter of the constitution
decisions establish precedents that are binding on the entire nation
leads us to Marbury vs Madison court case
Selection of Judges
lower courts
the federal judges are appointed by the pres and confirmed by a majority vote in the senate
senatorial courtesy
supreme court
nomination criteria include competence, ideology and policy preferences and race and ethnicity and gender
confirmation process
an FBI investigation and a rating from the American bar association begins the process
interest groups are playing an increasing role with their use of public protest, demonstrations, media advertisements, editorials and emails to senators
the senate judiciary committee holds public hearings and then makes a recommendation to the full senate to vote
How the supreme court selects cases
SC has original jurisdiction in cases involving two or more states and the Us and a state gov and the US and foreign ambassadors 2-3 cases per year → they get to chose what cases they want to discuss
rule of 4 - 4 of the 9 have to agree to hear the case
Solicitor General - are the 4th ranking member of the justice department and argues the cases to the SC on behalf of the US gov
they also play a role in influencing the court’s decision on which cases to hear
writs of certiorari - an urdir by the court directing the lower courts to send up the recorded given for review
Filing Briefs and Oral arguments
interested persons and groups that are not actually parties to the case may file friend of the courts briefs
interested persons and groups that are not actually involved with the case may file friend of the court briefs like interest groups do
oral arguments are open to the public
each party is required to file a brief (a detailed written statement, arguing one side of a case
the brief will cite relevant facts legal principles and precedents that support their arguments
The Decision
the justices discuss each case in a closed meeting held on Friday
the chief justice provides over the meeting
the justices will vote then must write a formal opinion
opinions present the issues, establish precedents, and se guidelines for the lower courts
majority opinion - this is known as the opinion of the court is the law of the land
concurring opinion - supports the majority but stresses different constitutional or leal reasons for reaching the judgement
dissenting opinion - the minority view that disagrees with the opinion of the court
these have no legal standing
attorneys are allowed exactly 30 mins to present their case
Precedent
Stare Decisis - let the decision stand
most cases are based on precedents established in earlier cases
precedents help make supreme court decisions mor uniform, predictable, and efficient
examples:
Marbury v Madison - the court established the principle of judicial review as applied to congress and the president
Martin v Hunter lease - the court extended the power of the judicial review to overrule state courts
Baker v Carr - the supreme court established “one person, one vote”
Wesberry v Sanders - where this was applied to legislative districts
exceptions:
Brown v Board overturns Plessy v Ferguson
Judicial Philosophy
judicial restraint - try to figure out what the founders original intent was and use that to try and figure out how to deal with cases
believe that courts should differ to congress and president to establish policy
Judicial Activism - argue that the courts must correct injustices when other branches of gov or the state refuse to do so
argue that the constitution should be read through a modern lens
Public Opinion
justices are appointed for life so the decisions that make are not influenced by political pressures
the salaries cannot be reduced
public has limited access to court proceedings
the certiorari process allows the court to set its own agenda
justices are aware of and sensitive to public opinion
the appointment and confirmation process keeps the court from deviating too far from public opinion
congress and state legislatures can amend the constitutions
congress can change the court’s appellate jurisdiction
not the original jurisdiction of the supreme court
congress has the power to change the number of justices on the court
justices can be impeached
Congress
Bicameral Congress - House of Reps and Senate- Why?
History - the British Parliament had 2 houses and most colonial legislatures were also bicameral
fought the revolutionary war → created the articles of confederation → Connecticut compromise: large states want representation and small states want equal representation → the House of reps is proportional and the senate is equal representation
federalism - the house of reps represents the interest of the people and the senate represents the interests of the state
the bicameral legislatures also fragmented power and checked majority interests
it also shows the legislative process → encourages careful deliberation and compromise
House vs Senate
House - represents the people
435 members
2 year terms (no term limits)
a representative must be 25 years old and American citizen for 7 years and a resident from the state from which her or she is elected
always been elected by the people
initiates revenue bills - the power of the purse, brings charges over the impeachments (at he conclusion of a investigation there is a possibility that something bad was done), chooses the president when the electoral college is deadlocked (because they are closer to the people)
Senate - represent the state
100 members
6 year terms (no term limits) - a continuous body
a senator must be 30 years old and American citizen for 9 years and a resident from the state from which her or she is elected
originally chosen by the state legislators until the 17th amendment allowed or the direct election of senators
easily bribed
ratifies treaties negotiated by the president, posses the sole power to try to judge impeachment cases, confirms judicial(appointments to the supreme court) and executive appointments
House of Reps
the number of seats is going to be apportioned by the population - reapportioned after a census is taken - each state has at least 1
the cap of members is 435
reapportionment is tied to the issue of redistricting which happens every 10 years as a census is taken
Baker vs Carr
Districts and gerrymandering
the constitution does not define or discuss congressional districts, but in 1842, congress decided that all the seats in the house will be filed from single member districts
1842 each state was given the responsibility to drawing the boundary lines of its congressional districts which gave way to the practice of gerrymandering
gerrymandering is when the majority party in each state legislature redraws congressional districts to ensure the maximum number of seats for its own candidates
protects incumbents and discourages challenges
strengthens the majority party
decreases minority representation
in rare cases an increase in minority rep - Shaw vs Reno which happens in 1990
Supreme Court and redistricting
rural areas dominated many state legislatures, so districts often favored less populated rural areas of a state
Baker vs Carr set forth the principle of “one person, one vote” in drawing congressional districts - this case triggers widespread redistricting and gave cities and suburban areas representation in congress
according to the supreme court
districts must be populated, compact and lines must be contiguous
redistricting cannot dilute minority voting strength
district lines cannot be drawn based solely on race
supreme court has not eliminated gerrymandering for partisan political purposes
How congress is organized: the role of the parties
political parties play a key role in the organization of both houses of congress
the majority party is the party in each chamber with the most votes
the majority party enjoys the following advantages
hold the committee chairs
it chooses the speaker of the house
assigns bills to each committee
holds the majority on each committee
controls the house of rules of committee
sets the legislative agenda
Organization of congress
House
more formal structure and stricter rules
the speaker of the house
presides over the house and oversee and all business
2nd in line for presidential succession - speaker of the house
other leaders
majority and minority leaders
party whips
Senate
more freedom with debate and less formal
the vice president
head of the senate and casts the tie-breaking vote
in their absence, the pro Tempore runs business
other leaders
the majority leader - the true leader of the senate
minority
The Committee System
importance
both the house and the senate are divided into committees
they play a dominant role in policy making
they are important to the house because of how large the house is (435 members)
standing committees
permanent bodies that continue from one congress to the next
they focus on legislation in a particular area such as foreign relations or agriculture
heavy reliance on lobbyist as they are policy experts
other committees
select committees are formed for a specific purpose for a limited time - are usually formed to investigate a current matter of great public concern
ex. oil and energy use
joint committees include members of both houses and often focus attention on major issues
formed in desperate times like COVID
conference committees - temporary bodies that are formed to resolve differences between the house and the senate versions of a bill
The House Rules Committee and Ways and Means
Jermain - on topic with the bill
rules of committee is controlled by the speaker - it is often called the “traffic cop” or the speakers “right arm”
it sets the guidelines for floor debate - it gives each bill a rule that puts the bill on the calendar limits the time for debate and determines the type of amendments that will be allowed
closed rule sets strict time limits on debates and forbids amendments from the floor
an open rule has less strict time limits and permits amendments from the floor
The Ways and Means Committee has jurisdiction on all taxation, tariffs and other revenue sharing measures - this is an exclusive committee
Committee Chairs
are chosen by the speaker of the house
they exercise great power and enjoy considerable prestige
they call meetings, schedule hearings, hire staff, recommend majority members to sit on conference committees and select all subcommittee chairs
historically the chairs were chosen by a seniority system where the majority party member with the most continuous service become the chair - now the speaker has more control
Legislative process
approximately 5000 bills are introduced each year
only 125 are made to law
the bicameral congress and its complex committee system present a formidable series of legislative obstacles that defeat most bills
the legislative process is supposed to be slow - by negotiation and compromise
Creating Bills
anyone can write a bill
most bills are not written by congress
most bills originate in the executive branch
business, labor, agriculture, and other interest groups often draft bills
only members of congress can introduce bill - they drop them into the hopper(a box hanging on the edge of the clerks desk
filibuster is more possible in the senate rather than the house of reps because the house has more members which require more rules
Committee Action
the house and the senate have parallel processes
bills are assigned a number and then sent to the appropriate committee - from there it is sent to a subcommittee for study hearings revisions and approval
most bills die in committee where they are pigeonholed or buried
if the majority of the house wishes to force a pigeonholed bill out of committee it can use a discharge petition signed by a majority of the house members
bills approved by a subcommittee then return to the full committee - where members can mark up or add items to the bill
committees can reject a bill or send it to the house or senate floor with a positive recommendation
Floor action
House
the rules committees gives the bill a rule - placing in on the legislative calendar allowing a specified time for debate and determining if any amendments will be allowed
the bill is debated and a vote is ultimately taken by the full house
Senate
members may speak on the floor as long as they wish
a filibuster is a way of delaying or preventing action on a bill by using long speeches and unlimited debate to “take a bill to death”
filibusters can be stopped by a cloture vote of 60 senators to cut off debate
they are so successful - most important bills are no longer require a simple majority of 51 votes
they need a supermajor of 60 → so that cloture can easily be invoked
additionally a senator may place a hold, a parliamentary procedure where the senator asks to be informed before a bill is brought to the floor → this stalls action
How Members Vote
delegate model
vote is cast to reflect the majority of their constituents
trustee model
members use their best judgement to make policy in the best interests of the people
politico model
members wavier between taking care of your people or between the delegate and the trustee depending on the issue
Congressional oversight
refers to the congressional review of the activities of an executive agency department
the senate exercises special oversight functions by confirming cabinet heads and presidential appointments to federal courts
advice and consent power
methods of oversight - a check that congress ha over congressional oversight
setting guidelines for new agencies
holding hearing and conducting investigations
using budgets control
reorganizing the agency
evaluating an agencies programs
Foreign policy
the constitutional division of power
congress has the power to declare war - the senate has the power to ratify the treaties
president has the power to wage war and the power to negotiate treaties
war powers resolution
passed by congress in 1973: designed to make sure Congress can check the presidents war waging power as commander and chief
the president must notify congress within 48 hours of deploying troops - congress can request the pres. to bring home troops within 60-90 days
Reducing power and perks
term limits for congress?
new ethics laws
organizational changes
ex. one person can recall the speaker → long term problems
pork-barrel legislation - you promise people money for a project in order to maintain the vote in your favor
franking privilege - free mail if you already sit in congress
you can keep your name fresh in people’s mind → the know the name when it comes to reelection
The Presidency
there are qualifications and benefits when becoming president
the constitution has placed no limit on the number of terms a president might serve until 1951
the 22nd amendment placed limits on presidential terms
a president may not be elected more than twice or once if they became president due to succession
The President As Chief Executive
executive power
chief executive - has to execute the law
this power shall be vested into the power of the president of the US
he has to be honorable to the laws that are passed
the president enforces federal laws and administer bureaucracy
the chief bureaucrat
appointment power
president has the power to appoint the following:
cabinet members
supreme court, US Marshalls, and attorneys
the heads of independent agencies
ambassadors and other diplomats
the appointments are subject to review by the senate
removal power
presidents have the power to remove most officials without senate approval
the president cannot dismiss federal judges or commissioners of independent regulatory agencies
Cabinet
the cabinet includes 15 executive departments and employ nearly 2/3 of the federal gov civilian employees
they are academically talented at their chosen field
cabinet members often have divided loyalties
loyalty to the president and to the institutional goals of their own departments
the president can have a difficult time controlling cabinet departments bc:
interest groups often form close ties with cabinet departments and the congressional committees
the careers of many civil servants extend beyond a single presidential administration so they develop strong loyalty to their department
congress competes with the president for influence over the cabinet departments
The executive office of president
The office of management and budget
the OMB is the largest office within the executive office
it has a staff of over 500 and has to assist the president in overseeing the preparation of the federal budget
they have to work out compromises the CBO - who also comes up with a federal budget
the national security council
the NSC is composed of the president’s principal foreign and military advisors
the vp, secretary of state, secretary of the treasury, secretary of defense, national security advisor
they advise and assist the pres. on national security and foreign policy
The Council of Economic Advisors
CEA is 3 economists that try to advise the pres. on economic policy
ex. what happens when COVID hits and production and shipment slow down → could lead to a recession → the CEA help guide the pres.
The White House Staff
chief of staff and the press secretary
the COS is the highest ranking person in the executive office of the president
they would have to supervise key white house staff and managing the flow of people and information into the oval office
the staff must be personally loyal to the pres
the president can appoint and dismiss members of his staff without the senate approval
the staff’s primary responsibility is to present the pres with policy options and analysis
The President as Chief Legislator
legislative power
give the state of union address to congress each year
he can brin issues to the attention of congress “from time to time”
he can veto congressional legislation - veto power
president use their role as national leader and the head of the party to set the policy agenda
initiates much of the legislation that congress considers
Veto Power
a pres can veto a bill but congress can override with 2/3 vote in each chamber
the pres can wait 10 full days and if congress is still in session the bill will become a law without the pres signature
the pres can exercise a pocket veto by waiting 10 full days - if congress adjourns before the 10 days are up → the bill will die
pres often use the threat of a veto to persuade congress to modify a bill
a bill is often revised and then passed in another form
pres must accept or reject the entire bill
Working with Congress
most pres. prefer to establish a cooperative bipartisan relationship with congress
assign liaisons to lobby legislators
work with the majority an minority leaders
use the media to focus public attention on important issues
use high presidential approval ratings to persuade legislators to support presidential programs
bargain with wavering legislators by offering concessions and pork that will benefit a members district
Ordinance power
the president has the power to issue executive orders
this order is a directive rule or regulation that has the effect of the law
the power to issued these orders comes from the constitution and the acts of congress
although the ordinance power is not specifically mention the ordinance power - it is intended to imply power stemming from the take care clause
the size of gov has caused congress to delegate more and more discretion to the pres and presidential subordinates
Divided government
congress are controlled by different parties or the two chambers of congress are controlled by different parties
heightens partisanship → makes it harder to negotiate compromises
leads to lower approval ratings for people of congress and the president
leads to gridlock
it poses a problem for the pres in making federal appointments → stricter committee scrutiny, narrows the filed of potential candidates and can spark character attacks on nominees
presidents try to overcome these problems
using the media to generate public support
threatening to veto objectionable legislation
making deals with key congressional leaders
building coalitions with key interests groups
increasing reliance on white house staff
Formal Constitutional Powers
the president is the commander and chief and has the power to deploy the troops
Korean war, Vietnam war, Persian gulf war and the Iraq war
the president appoints all ambassadors subject to senate confirmation
the president has the power to appoint justices to the supreme court and all other federal judges
the president gets to negotiate treaties which are subject to Senate ratification
the president has the sole power to recognize nations
the president receives ambassadors and other public ministers
the president has the power to grant reprieves and pardons
Informal powers
the president can negotiate executive agreements with the heads of the foreign governments
terminate after the pres term is over
the pres. is recognized as the global leader who meets world leaders to build international coalitions
the pres is expected to manage international crises
the pres has access to confidential information not available to congress or the public
President as Chief Diplomat
congress typically defers to the pres when it comes to foreign affairs
the pres can both extend and terminate diplomatic relations with foreign nations
the pres has the power to negotiate treaties with other nations and then they are subject to a 2/3 vote in the senate
the senate rejected the treaties of Versailles ending WW1 but approved of Carter’s Panama Canal Treaty
pres rely more on executive agreements than formal treaties bc they do not need congressional approval
these are not binding on future pres as they are not part of American law
The Importance of Public Support and Approval Ratings
public support is crucial to presidential success
there is still a score keeper that just tells us what the pres is doing and how well he is doing it
these things increase approval
there is a brief honeymoon periods at the beginning of the new administration
positive media coverage of presidential activities and decisions
foreign policy success
foreign crises that produce the “rally around the flag effect”
strong economic growth and low unemployment
these things decrease approval
scandals that involve the pres and/or top ideas
a ap between high expectations and low job performance
foreign wars that go badly over a protracted period of time
weak economic growth and high unemployment
Importance of the Media
media plays a crucial role in influencing how the public perceives the pres
the gate keeper role
the pres is generally more successful than congressional leaders in using the media to set the policy agenda
the pres has an advantage over congress in the following ways:
the pres represents the whole entire nation but congress represents their own districts or state
the pres is the leader of the “free world”
the pres is more powerful than any individual member of congress
the pres speaks with a single voice but congress speaks with the competing voices of 365 members
Presidential Transition
the vice president
impeachment
problems of succession
lame duck
Presidential Disability
sections 3 and 4a of the 25th amendment provide procedures to follow when the president is disabled
the vp is to become acting pres if
the president informs congress that power will temporarily be in control
the vp and majority of the members of the cabinet inform congress that the president is incapacitated
Bureaucracy
large complex organization of appointed officials
the FD includes all agencies, people, and procedures through which the federal government operates
there are about 2.7 million civilian and 1.4 million military federal gov employees
half of all the civilian employees work for the department of defense and an additional 28% work for the postal service
key features:
hierarchical authority - a chain of command in which authority flows from the top down
job specialization - each employee has defined duties and responsibilities
formal rules - all employees must follow established procedures
Growth of Bureaucracy
the spoils system
a group of elite, upper-class white males
Andrew Jackson awarded federal posts to a party loyalists
civil service
Pendleton Act of 1883 created the federal civil service
workers are hired based on merit not party loyalty
the office of personnel management administers all civil service laws and regulations as well as hires for most federal agencies
federal and state employees
the # of federal employees has remained constant
since 1950
block grants have shifted resources from the federal to the state government → increasing the number of state employees
federal mandates have also shifted responsibilities to the states → increases the need for state employees
The Cabinet Departments Review
the advice and consent power gives the senate the power to go over the pres. appointments and treaties
there are 15 cabinet departments - each department is headed by a secretary
all 15 heads are chosen by the pres. and approved by the senate
the treasury department has authority over the printing of currency
cabinet secretaires often develop a strong loyalty to their departments → cabinets are often not close presidential advisors
Independent Regulatory Agencies
created to protect the public by regulating key sectors of the society
the Interstate Commerce Commission is one of the best known regulatory agencies
these agencies are led by small commissions appointed by the pres. and confirmed by the senate
commissioners cannot be removed by the pres during their terms of office
the federal reserve board
set monetary policy: setting bank interest rates, controlling inflation, regulating the money supply, and adjusting bank reserve requirements
FED has great independence which is meant to remove monetary policy from politics
Other parts
gov corporations
provide service that could be provided by the private sector
the corporations for public broadcasting, Amtrak, and the US postal service are the best known government agencies
independent executive agencies
includes most of all the non-cabinet departments
NASA, NSF, EPA, GSA are independent executive agencies
Implementing gov laws
translation of policy goals into rules and standard operating procedures
the process can be questionable because of
conflicting goals
faulty program design
lack of financial resources
fragmentation of responsibilities
some federal agencies are doing the same thing so another thing is not getting done
Interest groups and the Bureaucracy
iron triangles
an alliance among an administrative agency an interest group and a congressional committee
these are sometimes called sub governments because they are so powerful
issue networks
includes policy experts, media pundits, congressional staffs, interest groups who regularly debate an issue
the pres often fills agency positions with people from an issue network who shares their views
Characteristics of the federal courts
adversarial - there are 2 parties that bring their conflicts before an impartial arbiter or judge - one must have standing
standing = the ability to show the effect or the damage of something that has happened directly to you or someone directly related
the plaintiff brins the chare and the defendant is the one being charged
passive - federal judges are constrained by the constitution to deciding actual despites rather than the hypothetical
passive branch of the gov that depends on others to take initiative
jurisdiction - the court’s authority to hear a case
original - courts that where the case is first heard
appellate - courts that have the case brought to them on appeal for a lower court
exclusive - cases can only be heard in certain courts
concurrent - cases that can be heard in either a federal or a state court
Federal Court system
congress has the power to create all lower courts
the judiciary act of 1789 established the basic three tiered structure that still exits and also sets the number of supreme court justices at 6 which was later expanded to 9
district court
there are 94 district courts staffed by about 700 judges
courts of appeals
review all district court decisions
rule on decisions from the federal regulatory agencies
do not hold trials or hear testimony
supreme court
America’s court of last resort
hears the cases from the lower appeal courts and the state supreme courts
is the final arbiter of the constitution
decisions establish precedents that are binding on the entire nation
leads us to Marbury vs Madison court case
Selection of Judges
lower courts
the federal judges are appointed by the pres and confirmed by a majority vote in the senate
senatorial courtesy
supreme court
nomination criteria include competence, ideology and policy preferences and race and ethnicity and gender
confirmation process
an FBI investigation and a rating from the American bar association begins the process
interest groups are playing an increasing role with their use of public protest, demonstrations, media advertisements, editorials and emails to senators
the senate judiciary committee holds public hearings and then makes a recommendation to the full senate to vote
How the supreme court selects cases
SC has original jurisdiction in cases involving two or more states and the Us and a state gov and the US and foreign ambassadors 2-3 cases per year → they get to chose what cases they want to discuss
rule of 4 - 4 of the 9 have to agree to hear the case
Solicitor General - are the 4th ranking member of the justice department and argues the cases to the SC on behalf of the US gov
they also play a role in influencing the court’s decision on which cases to hear
writs of certiorari - an urdir by the court directing the lower courts to send up the recorded given for review
Filing Briefs and Oral arguments
interested persons and groups that are not actually parties to the case may file friend of the courts briefs
interested persons and groups that are not actually involved with the case may file friend of the court briefs like interest groups do
oral arguments are open to the public
each party is required to file a brief (a detailed written statement, arguing one side of a case
the brief will cite relevant facts legal principles and precedents that support their arguments
The Decision
the justices discuss each case in a closed meeting held on Friday
the chief justice provides over the meeting
the justices will vote then must write a formal opinion
opinions present the issues, establish precedents, and se guidelines for the lower courts
majority opinion - this is known as the opinion of the court is the law of the land
concurring opinion - supports the majority but stresses different constitutional or leal reasons for reaching the judgement
dissenting opinion - the minority view that disagrees with the opinion of the court
these have no legal standing
attorneys are allowed exactly 30 mins to present their case
Precedent
Stare Decisis - let the decision stand
most cases are based on precedents established in earlier cases
precedents help make supreme court decisions mor uniform, predictable, and efficient
examples:
Marbury v Madison - the court established the principle of judicial review as applied to congress and the president
Martin v Hunter lease - the court extended the power of the judicial review to overrule state courts
Baker v Carr - the supreme court established “one person, one vote”
Wesberry v Sanders - where this was applied to legislative districts
exceptions:
Brown v Board overturns Plessy v Ferguson
Judicial Philosophy
judicial restraint - try to figure out what the founders original intent was and use that to try and figure out how to deal with cases
believe that courts should differ to congress and president to establish policy
Judicial Activism - argue that the courts must correct injustices when other branches of gov or the state refuse to do so
argue that the constitution should be read through a modern lens
Public Opinion
justices are appointed for life so the decisions that make are not influenced by political pressures
the salaries cannot be reduced
public has limited access to court proceedings
the certiorari process allows the court to set its own agenda
justices are aware of and sensitive to public opinion
the appointment and confirmation process keeps the court from deviating too far from public opinion
congress and state legislatures can amend the constitutions
congress can change the court’s appellate jurisdiction
not the original jurisdiction of the supreme court
congress has the power to change the number of justices on the court
justices can be impeached