Chapter 10 Vocabulary
Standing Committee
A permanent committee with the power to propose and write legislation that covers a particular subject, such as finance or agriculture
Bill
A proposed law that has been sponsored by a member of Congress and submitted to the clerk of the House or Senate
Closed Rule
A provision by the House Rules Committee limiting or prohibiting the introduction of amendments during debate
Open Rule
A provision by the House Rules Committee that permits floor debate and the addition of amendments to a bill
Delegate (Member of Congress Role)
A representative who votes according to the preferences of their constituency
Trustee
A representative who votes based on what they think is best for their constituency
Party Unity Vote
A roll-call vote in the House or Senate in which at least 50 percent of the members of one party take a particular position and are opposed by at least 50 percent of the members of the other party
Oversight
The effort by Congress, through hearings, investigations, and other techniques, to exercise control over the activities of executive agencies
Majority Leader
The elected leader of the majority party in the House of Representatives or in the Senate; in the House, the majority leader is subordinate in the party hierarchy to the Speaker of the House
Select Committees
(Usually) Temporary legislative committees set up to highlight or investigate a particular issue or address an issue not within the jurisdiction of existing committees
Omnibus Appropriations Bill
A bill that deals with a number of unrelated topics
Roll-call Vote
A vote in which each legislator's yes or no vote is recorded as the clerk calls the names of the members alphabetically
Incumbency
Holding the political office for which one is running
Minority Leader
The elected leader of the minority party in the House or Senate
Conference
A gathering of House Republicans every two years to elect their House leaders; Democrats call their gathering the "caucus"
Bicameral Legislature
A legislative assembly composed of two chambers or houses
Caucus (political)
A normally closed political party business meeting of citizens or lawmakers to select candidates, elect officers, plan strategy, or make decisions regarding legislative matters
Whip
A party member in the House or Senate responsible for coordinating the party's legislative strategy, building support for key issues, and counting votes
Pocket veto
A presidential veto that is automatically triggered if the president does not act on a given piece of legislation passed during the final 10 days of a legislative session
Cloture
A rule or process in a legislative body aimed at ending debate on a given bill; in the U.S. Senate, 60 senators (three-fifths) must agree in order to impose a time limit and end debate
Unorthodox Lawmaking
A set of legislative procedures that deviates from regular order; reflects a greater level of control from party leaders and less deliberation from members
Filibuster
A tactic used by members of the Senate to prevent action on legislation they oppose by continuously holding the floor and speaking until the majority backs down; once given the floor, senators have unlimited time to speak, and it requires a vote of three-fifths of the Senate to end a filibuster
Substantive Representation
A type of representation in which representatives are held accountable to their constituency if they fail to represent that constituency properly; this is incentive for representatives to provide good representation when their personal background, views, and interests differ from those of their constituency
Descriptive Representation
A type of representation in which representatives have the same racial, gender, ethnic, religious, or educational backgrounds as their constituents; it is based on the principle that if two individuals are similar in background, character, interests, and perspectives, then one can correctly represent the other's views
Pork Barrel (or pork)
Appropriations made by legislative bodies for local projects that are often not needed but that are created so that local representatives can win re-election in their home districts
Gerrymandering
Drawing legislative districts in such a way as to give unfair advantage to a political party or one racial or ethnic group
Conference Committees
Joint committees created to work out a compromise on House and Senate versions of a piece of legislation
Joint Committees
Legislative committees formed of members of both the House and Senate
Staff Agencies
Legislative support agencies responsible for policy analysis
Ping-Ponging
Sending amendments sent back and forth between the relevant House and Senate committees to reconcile differences between bills or major measures without convening a conference committee at all
Appropriations
The amounts of money approved by Congress in statues (bills) that each unit or agency of government can spend
Speaker of the House
The chief presiding officer of the House of Representatives; the Speaker is the most important party and House leader and can influence the legislative agenda, the fate of individual pieces of legislation, and members' positions within the House
Polarization
The deep ideological distance between the two parties
Impeachment
The format charge by the House of Representatives that a government official has committed "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors"
Multiple Referral
The practice of referring a bill to more than one committee for consideration
Veto
The president's constitutional power to turn down acts of Congress; a presidential veto may be overridden by a two-thirds vote of each house of Congress
Redistricting
The process of redrawing election districts and redistributing legislative representatives; this happens every 10 years to reflect shifts in population
Apportionment
The process, occurring after every decennial census, that allocates congressional seats among the 50 states
Seniority
The ranking given to an individual on the basis of length of continuous service on a committee in Congress
Constituency
The residents in the area from which an official is elected
Markup
The session in which a congressional committee rewires legislation to incorporate changes discussed during hearings on a bill