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Lecture

Chapter 3

The Texas Legislature in Context

“1 person 1 vote” is the golden principle (what you don’t wanna violate)

  • population needs to be roughly equally represented

  • senators represent roughly the same number of people

  • if district has 1,000 people 1 person represents 1/1000

Size of the Legislature

  • each of the 150 representatives represents roughly 161,000 people

  • each of the 31 senators represents roughly 1 million people

  • senators at the national level represent all of Texas

  • around 30 million people reside in Texas

Legislative Sessions

Regular sessions:

  • Meet every other year for about 4 ½ months

  • Not required to consider something the governor wants them to

Special Session:

  • A meeting of the legislature outside of that regular time

  • governor decides if there gets to be a special session

  • Legislature is required to focus on something the governor wants them to focus on and ONLY that

  • A special power reserved to the governor

Plurality- you’ve got the most votes typically under 50%

  • More votes than the other candidate

Majority- Over 50% + 1 of the votes

SuperMajority- Any majority larger than 50% (60% and up) of the votes

  • reserved for serious serious

Legislative Immunity- Protection legislators have from being arrested during legislative session

Typologies of State Legislatures: Full-Time and
Part-Time

Professional legislature

  • constantly in session

  • get paid better

  • full-time

    Citizen Legislature

  • opposite of professional

Hybrid Legislature

  • Mixture of the 2

Qualifications for Office and Length of
Terms

Members of the house

  • Must be 21

  • Live in Texas for 2 years

  • Reside in the district you are running for 1 year

Members of the senate

  • Must be 26 years

  • Live in Texas for 5 years

  • Must live in the District you are running for 1 year

    → The few requirements honors the heart of democratic life (equality)

    → illustrate the concept of “anyone can do it” (we are all equal)

Right to refuse winning candidate

  • People may have chosen you but legislature itself can refuse to seat you and acknowledge you are the proper person

  • Has the right to decide wether the election is valid

  • Not a local right only sate

Term Lengths

  • 31 senate districts roughly equal in population

  • 150 house districts roughly equal in population

  • House of Representative = 2 years

  • Senators = 4 years

Redistricting

  • districts do not change

  • population in districts is always changing

  • change the shape of each of district to follow the “1 person 1 vote” principle

  • Occurs once every 10 years after the US census comes out

    Gerrymandering-

Term Limit

  • Number of times you can serve until you can’t

  • city council members can only serve 2 times

  • In Texas there are no term limits

Turnover

  • When current officeholders step down from office
    and are replaced by new officeholders; turnover may result
    from retirement, defeat in an election, or term limits.

Incumbency rates

  • You are in the representative seat

  • Get reelected when run for reelection

  • In Texas 75% incumbency rate

  • When you are in a representative seat your chances for winning reelection are over 75%

  • People are more likely to vote for someone who’s name they know (name recognition)

  • Voters may look at what party they are affiliated with

  • Voters may also look at minority representation

Representation: Theories and Demographics

Representation

  • The relationship between the elected official and the people who elected them

Delegate

  • The representative could be trying to translate directly whatever the majority opinion into the legislature

  • suggests that representatives are forgetting their own preferences and translating the majority into legislature

Trustee

  • representatives are not trying to translate directly the voice of the majority in their district

  • try to consider what is in the best interest of the district as a whole

  • assuming that elected officials have access to information that voters do not.

Politico

  • Judicious combination of the first two

  • On issues where the public is likely to be paying attention are more likely to do what is in accordance with their district

  • Probably the smartest approach if you are planning to be reelected

  • Probably what most politicians are doing most of the time

Theory’s of how representatives should act

  • Representation is based on geography

  • each district is associated with a particular shape of geography

  • 8 city districts in Laredo

    Microcosm Theory and Demographic

  • holds that, while each individual member cannot truly represent the public at large, collectively the legislature should represent the whole population.

  • the assumption is that people with the same ethnic, racial, socioeconomic, or sex/gender background share political values and beliefs, regardless of where they live.

  • Legislature should look like you

  • Texas legislature does not

  • Its a theory about what it should look like not what it is

Chapter 4

The Office of the Governor

Qualifications

  • At least 30 years old

  • Full-time Job

  • Executive positions are a full time job

  • Be a Texas resident for at least 5 years

  • U.S Citizen

  • Unlike legislators who work for a handful of months every other year; governor is not allowed to have any other employment or receive compensation

    (A law that is not enforced is not really a law)

    (Enforcement makes the law real)

    Common Characteristics among governors

  • Men

  • White

  • Protestant

  • Educated

  • Wealthy

  • Previous political experience

  • Never had a governor of hispanic descent

  • View it as pinnacle of their career

  • mostly conservative, Democratic until 1978

Terms

  • 4-year terms since 1972

  • No term limits

  • Many served 2, 2-year terms

Powers of the Governor

Plural Executive- Administrative powers are shared between officials who are independent of the governor

Executive Roles

  • Directs state bureaucracy (Agencies that have a role in performing legislature) (DPS)

    • governor is their big boss

  • Appointment Power

    • governor give jobs to their friends

    • top positions of the bureaucracy

    • certain appointments need senate approval

  • Plural executive

    • designed to weaken the governor

    • elected by the people

    • traditional functions of governor are divided

    • positions are independent of the governor

    • governor can’t fire them

  • governor makes about 3,000 appointments

  • Recess appointment

  • Patronage

    • some of these positions are rewards from the governor

  • Line-item veto

    • when the governor signs legislation that passed the house and senate

    • allows the governor to erase certain expenditures before they pass

    • bill is passed

Lecture

Chapter 3

The Texas Legislature in Context

“1 person 1 vote” is the golden principle (what you don’t wanna violate)

  • population needs to be roughly equally represented

  • senators represent roughly the same number of people

  • if district has 1,000 people 1 person represents 1/1000

Size of the Legislature

  • each of the 150 representatives represents roughly 161,000 people

  • each of the 31 senators represents roughly 1 million people

  • senators at the national level represent all of Texas

  • around 30 million people reside in Texas

Legislative Sessions

Regular sessions:

  • Meet every other year for about 4 ½ months

  • Not required to consider something the governor wants them to

Special Session:

  • A meeting of the legislature outside of that regular time

  • governor decides if there gets to be a special session

  • Legislature is required to focus on something the governor wants them to focus on and ONLY that

  • A special power reserved to the governor

Plurality- you’ve got the most votes typically under 50%

  • More votes than the other candidate

Majority- Over 50% + 1 of the votes

SuperMajority- Any majority larger than 50% (60% and up) of the votes

  • reserved for serious serious

Legislative Immunity- Protection legislators have from being arrested during legislative session

Typologies of State Legislatures: Full-Time and
Part-Time

Professional legislature

  • constantly in session

  • get paid better

  • full-time

    Citizen Legislature

  • opposite of professional

Hybrid Legislature

  • Mixture of the 2

Qualifications for Office and Length of
Terms

Members of the house

  • Must be 21

  • Live in Texas for 2 years

  • Reside in the district you are running for 1 year

Members of the senate

  • Must be 26 years

  • Live in Texas for 5 years

  • Must live in the District you are running for 1 year

    → The few requirements honors the heart of democratic life (equality)

    → illustrate the concept of “anyone can do it” (we are all equal)

Right to refuse winning candidate

  • People may have chosen you but legislature itself can refuse to seat you and acknowledge you are the proper person

  • Has the right to decide wether the election is valid

  • Not a local right only sate

Term Lengths

  • 31 senate districts roughly equal in population

  • 150 house districts roughly equal in population

  • House of Representative = 2 years

  • Senators = 4 years

Redistricting

  • districts do not change

  • population in districts is always changing

  • change the shape of each of district to follow the “1 person 1 vote” principle

  • Occurs once every 10 years after the US census comes out

    Gerrymandering-

Term Limit

  • Number of times you can serve until you can’t

  • city council members can only serve 2 times

  • In Texas there are no term limits

Turnover

  • When current officeholders step down from office
    and are replaced by new officeholders; turnover may result
    from retirement, defeat in an election, or term limits.

Incumbency rates

  • You are in the representative seat

  • Get reelected when run for reelection

  • In Texas 75% incumbency rate

  • When you are in a representative seat your chances for winning reelection are over 75%

  • People are more likely to vote for someone who’s name they know (name recognition)

  • Voters may look at what party they are affiliated with

  • Voters may also look at minority representation

Representation: Theories and Demographics

Representation

  • The relationship between the elected official and the people who elected them

Delegate

  • The representative could be trying to translate directly whatever the majority opinion into the legislature

  • suggests that representatives are forgetting their own preferences and translating the majority into legislature

Trustee

  • representatives are not trying to translate directly the voice of the majority in their district

  • try to consider what is in the best interest of the district as a whole

  • assuming that elected officials have access to information that voters do not.

Politico

  • Judicious combination of the first two

  • On issues where the public is likely to be paying attention are more likely to do what is in accordance with their district

  • Probably the smartest approach if you are planning to be reelected

  • Probably what most politicians are doing most of the time

Theory’s of how representatives should act

  • Representation is based on geography

  • each district is associated with a particular shape of geography

  • 8 city districts in Laredo

    Microcosm Theory and Demographic

  • holds that, while each individual member cannot truly represent the public at large, collectively the legislature should represent the whole population.

  • the assumption is that people with the same ethnic, racial, socioeconomic, or sex/gender background share political values and beliefs, regardless of where they live.

  • Legislature should look like you

  • Texas legislature does not

  • Its a theory about what it should look like not what it is

Chapter 4

The Office of the Governor

Qualifications

  • At least 30 years old

  • Full-time Job

  • Executive positions are a full time job

  • Be a Texas resident for at least 5 years

  • U.S Citizen

  • Unlike legislators who work for a handful of months every other year; governor is not allowed to have any other employment or receive compensation

    (A law that is not enforced is not really a law)

    (Enforcement makes the law real)

    Common Characteristics among governors

  • Men

  • White

  • Protestant

  • Educated

  • Wealthy

  • Previous political experience

  • Never had a governor of hispanic descent

  • View it as pinnacle of their career

  • mostly conservative, Democratic until 1978

Terms

  • 4-year terms since 1972

  • No term limits

  • Many served 2, 2-year terms

Powers of the Governor

Plural Executive- Administrative powers are shared between officials who are independent of the governor

Executive Roles

  • Directs state bureaucracy (Agencies that have a role in performing legislature) (DPS)

    • governor is their big boss

  • Appointment Power

    • governor give jobs to their friends

    • top positions of the bureaucracy

    • certain appointments need senate approval

  • Plural executive

    • designed to weaken the governor

    • elected by the people

    • traditional functions of governor are divided

    • positions are independent of the governor

    • governor can’t fire them

  • governor makes about 3,000 appointments

  • Recess appointment

  • Patronage

    • some of these positions are rewards from the governor

  • Line-item veto

    • when the governor signs legislation that passed the house and senate

    • allows the governor to erase certain expenditures before they pass

    • bill is passed

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