Chap. 5, Lesson 3 Notes
Lesson 3 – “How Congress Works"
Makeup of Congress:
*More than half are lawyers
*Almost all have college degrees
*They tend to be “joiners” and are more active in community organizations than the average citizen.
Privileges: Salary: $174K/yr.; Majority and Minority Ldrs. -- $193.4K; Speaker -- $223.5K; Free office space, parking, trips to home states, special facilities;
franking privilege – the right to send job-related mail for free.
Immunity – legal protection that allows them to say and do what they feel is right (within the law) without fear.
Responsibility #1, Lawmaking: Behind the Scenes Helpers
1. Clerks, Secretaries, and Special Assistants
a. do research for new bills (ideas for laws)/ issues
b. handle voters’ requests for help (called “casework”)
c. handle reporters and lobbyists – those hired by private interest groups to try to influence government decision
makers.
2. Interns and Pages
a. interns → college or grad students; do research, perform office duties
b. pages → are high school juniors; run errands, deliver messages, etc.
3. Committee Staff
4. Support Services
a. Library of Congress – one copy of every book published in U.S. is here.
b. Congressional Budget Office (CBO) – plans how to spend money; shows effect of laws/programs on citizens
c. General Accountability Office (GAO) -- monitors government spending; makes recommendations
Responsibility #2: Casework
1. Representatives and Senators help constituents (YOU) from home districts and states deal with the federal government.
2. Most requests -- handled by office staff as “casework.”
3. Casework is important for three main reasons:
a. to remain popular and get re-elected
b. watchdog function – making sure executive branch agencies and programs do what they're supposed to.
c. gives the average person a way to deal with the federal government.
Responsibility #3: Helping Districts & States
Members of Congress also try to bring federal government programs/money into states in three main ways:
1. Public Works Projects – things like local construction and transportation projects;
2. Grants/Contracts – awarded by federal agencies; source of money and jobs
3. Use of influence – try to get federal agencies to consider their district or state. “Pork-barrel
projects”/“earmarks” are those that mostly benefit local districts or states; often are stuck into the fine print of
bills being considered (in the Senate, especially.).
Lesson 3 – “How Congress Works"
Makeup of Congress:
*More than half are lawyers
*Almost all have college degrees
*They tend to be “joiners” and are more active in community organizations than the average citizen.
Privileges: Salary: $174K/yr.; Majority and Minority Ldrs. -- $193.4K; Speaker -- $223.5K; Free office space, parking, trips to home states, special facilities;
franking privilege – the right to send job-related mail for free.
Immunity – legal protection that allows them to say and do what they feel is right (within the law) without fear.
Responsibility #1, Lawmaking: Behind the Scenes Helpers
1. Clerks, Secretaries, and Special Assistants
a. do research for new bills (ideas for laws)/ issues
b. handle voters’ requests for help (called “casework”)
c. handle reporters and lobbyists – those hired by private interest groups to try to influence government decision
makers.
2. Interns and Pages
a. interns → college or grad students; do research, perform office duties
b. pages → are high school juniors; run errands, deliver messages, etc.
3. Committee Staff
4. Support Services
a. Library of Congress – one copy of every book published in U.S. is here.
b. Congressional Budget Office (CBO) – plans how to spend money; shows effect of laws/programs on citizens
c. General Accountability Office (GAO) -- monitors government spending; makes recommendations
Responsibility #2: Casework
1. Representatives and Senators help constituents (YOU) from home districts and states deal with the federal government.
2. Most requests -- handled by office staff as “casework.”
3. Casework is important for three main reasons:
a. to remain popular and get re-elected
b. watchdog function – making sure executive branch agencies and programs do what they're supposed to.
c. gives the average person a way to deal with the federal government.
Responsibility #3: Helping Districts & States
Members of Congress also try to bring federal government programs/money into states in three main ways:
1. Public Works Projects – things like local construction and transportation projects;
2. Grants/Contracts – awarded by federal agencies; source of money and jobs
3. Use of influence – try to get federal agencies to consider their district or state. “Pork-barrel
projects”/“earmarks” are those that mostly benefit local districts or states; often are stuck into the fine print of
bills being considered (in the Senate, especially.).