Transcript for:
Overview of American Congress and Its Powers

This is American Government, 3rd Edition, an OpenStacks textbook. All OpenStacks textbooks are covered under a Creative Commons license and are completely free. You can find this audiobook anywhere you listen to podcasts, including Spotify, YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and more.

Narrated by Brian Baric and Sarah Aria. Chapter 11, Congress Introduction. When U.S. citizens think of governmental power, they most likely think of the presidency.

The framers of the Constitution, however, clearly intended that Congress would be the cornerstone of the new republic. After years of tyranny under a king, they had little interest in creating another system with an overly powerful single individual at the top. Instead, while recognizing the need for centralization in terms of a stronger national government with an elected executive wielding its own authority, those at the Constitutional Convention wanted a strong representative assembly at the national level that would use careful consideration, deliberate action, and constituent representation to carefully draft legislation to meet the needs of the new republic.

Thus, Article 1 of the Constitution grants several key powers to Congress, which include overseeing the budget and all financial matters, including legislation, confirming or rejecting judicial and executive nominations, and even declaring war. Today, however, Congress is the institution most criticized by the public and the most misunderstood. How exactly does Capitol Hill operate? What What are the different structures and powers of the House of Representatives and the Senate? How are members of Congress elected?

How do they reach their decisions about legislation, budgets, and military action? This chapter addresses these aspects and more as it explores the first branch of government. 11.1 The Institutional Design of Congress.

Learning Objectives. By the end of this section, you will be able to describe the role of Congress in the U.S. constitutional system, define bicameralism, explain gerrymandering and the apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives, discuss the three kinds of powers granted to Congress, the origins of the U.S. Constitution, and the convention that brought it into existence are rooted in failure. The failure of the Articles of Confederation. After only a handful of years, the states of the Union decided that the Articles were simply unworkable.

In order to save the young republic, a convention was called, and delegates were sent to assemble and revise the Articles. From the discussions and compromises in this convention emerged Congress. in the form we recognize today. In this section, we will explore the debates and compromises that brought about the bicameral, two-chamber Congress, made up of a House of Representatives and Senate. We will also explore the goals of bicameralism and how it functions.

Finally, we will look at the different ways seats are apportioned in the two chambers, the Great Compromise, and the basics of bicameralism. Only a few years after the adoption of the Articles of Confederation, the Republican experiment seemed on the verge of failure. States deep in debt were printing increasingly worthless paper currency. Many were mired in interstate trade battles with each other. And in western Massachusetts, a small group of Revolutionary War veterans, angry over the prospect of losing their farms, broke into armed, open revolt against the state.

in what came to be known as Shays'Rebellion. The conclusion many reached was that the Articles of Confederation were simply not strong enough to keep the young republic together. In the spring of 1787, a convention was called, and delegates from all the states, except Rhode Island, which boycotted the convention, were sent to Philadelphia to hammer out a solution to this central problem.

The meeting these delegates convened became known as the Constitutional Convention of 1787. Although its prescribed purpose was to revise the Articles of Confederation, a number of delegates charted a path towards disposing of the Articles entirely. Under the Articles, the national legislature had been made up of a single chamber composed of an equal number of delegates from each of the states. Large states like Virginia felt it would be unfair to continue with this style of legislative institution.

As a result, Virginia's delegates proposed a plan that called for bicameralism, or the division of legislators into two separate assemblies. In this proposed two-chamber Congress, states with large populations would have more representatives in each chamber. Predictably, smaller states like New Jersey were unhappy with this proposal. In response, they issued their own plan, which called for a single chamber of Congress with equal representation and more state authority.

The storm of debate over how to allocate power between large and small states was eventually calmed by a third proposal. The Connecticut Compromise, also called the Great Compromise, proposed a bicameral Congress with members apportioned differently in each House. The upper House, the Senate, was to have two members from each state. This soothed the fears of the small states.

In the lower House, the House of Representatives, membership would be proportional to the population in each state. This measure protected the interests of the large states. In the final draft of the U.S.

Constitution, the bicameral Congress established by the Convention of 1787 was given a number of powers and limitations. These are outlined in Article 1. This article describes the minimum age of Congresspersons, requires that Congress meet at least once a year, Section 4. Guarantees members'pay. Section 6. And gives Congress the power to levy taxes, borrow money, and regulate commerce.

Section 8. These powers and limitations were the Constitutional Convention's response to the failings of the Articles of Confederation. Although the basic design of the House and Senate resulted from a political deal between large and small states, the bicameral legislature established by the convention, did not emerge from thin air. The concept had existed in Europe as far back as the medieval era. At that time, the two chambers of a legislature were divided based on class and designed to reflect different types of representation. The names of the two houses in the United Kingdom's bicameral parliament still reflect this older distinction today, the House of Lords and the House of Commons.

Likewise, those at the Constitutional Convention purposely structured the U.S. Senate differently from the House of Representatives in the hopes of encouraging different representative memberships in the two houses. Initially, for example, the power to elect senators was given to the state legislatures instead of to the voting public as it is now. The minimum age requirement is also lower for the House of Representatives.

A person must be at least 25 years old, to serve in the House, whereas one must be at least 30 to be a Senator. The bicameral system established at the Constitutional Convention and still followed today requires the two Houses to pass identical bills, or proposed items of legislation. This ensures that after all amending and modifying has occurred, the two Houses ultimately reach an agreement about the legislation they send to the President. Passing the same bill in both Houses is no easy feat.

And this is by design. The framers intended there to be a complex and difficult process for legislation to become law. This challenge serves a number of important and related functions. First, the difficulty of passing legislation through both houses makes it less likely, though hardly impossible, that Congress will act on fleeting instincts or without the necessary deliberation.

Second, the bicameral system ensures... that large-scale dramatic reform is exceptionally difficult to pass, and the status quo is more likely to win the day. This maintains a level of conservatism in government, something the landed elite at the convention preferred. Third, the bicameral system makes it difficult for a single faction or interest group to enact laws and restrictions that would unfairly favor it. Senate representation and house apportionment.

The Constitution specifies that every state will have two senators who each serve a six-year term. Therefore, with 50 states in the Union, there are currently 100 seats in the U.S. Senate. Senators were originally appointed by state legislatures, but in 1913, the 17th Amendment was approved, which allowed for senators to be elected by popular vote in each state. Seats in the House of Representatives are distributed among the states based on each state's population, and each member of the House is elected by voters in a specific congressional district.

Each state is guaranteed at least one seat in the House. House of Representatives. Total number of members, 435. Number of members per state, one or more based on population. Length of term of office, two years. Minimum age requirement, 25. Senate, total number of members, 100. Number of members per state, 2. Length of term of office, 6 years.

Minimum age requirement, 30. Congressional apportionment today is achieved through the equal proportions method, which uses a mathematical formula. to allocate seats based on U.S. Census Bureau population data, gathered every 10 years as required by the Constitution.

At the close of the first U.S. Congress in 1791, there were 65 representatives, each representing approximately 30,000 citizens. Then, as the territory of the United States expanded, sometimes by leaps and bounds, the population requirement for each new district increased as well.

Adjustments were made, but the roster of the House of Representatives continued to grow until it reached 435 members after the 1910 census. Ten years later, following the 1920 census and with urbanization changing populations across the country, Congress failed to reapportion membership because it became deadlocked on the issue. In 1929, an agreement was reached to permanently cap the number of seats in the House at 435. Redistricting occurs every 10 years after the U.S.

Census has established how many persons live in the United States and where. The boundaries of legislative districts are redrawn as needed to maintain similar numbers of voters in each, while still maintaining a total number of 435 districts. Because local areas can see their population grow as well as decline over time, these adjustments in district boundaries are typically needed. after 10 years have passed.

Currently, there are seven states with only one representative. Alaska, Delaware, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming. Whereas the most populous state, California, has a total of 53 congressional districts.

Two remaining problems in the House are the size of each representative's constituency, the body of voters who elect the the challenge of Washington, D.C. First, the average number of citizens in a congressional district now tops 700,000. This is arguably too many for House members to remain very close to the people. George Washington advocated for 30,000 per elected member to retain effective representation in the House.

The second problem is that the approximately 675,000 residents of the Federal District of Washington, District of Columbia, do not have voting representation. Like those living in the U.S. territories, they merely have a non-voting delegate. The stalemate in the 1920s wasn't the first time reapportionment in the House resulted in controversy, or the last. The first incident took place before any apportionment had even occurred, while the process was being discussed at the Constitutional Convention.

Representatives from large, slave-holding states believed that enslaved people should be counted as part of their total population. States with few or no enslaved people predictably argued against this. The compromise eventually reached allowed for each enslaved person, who could not vote, to count as three-fifths of a person for purposes of congressional representation.

Following the abolition of slavery at the end of Reconstruction, the former slaveholding states in the South took a number of steps to prevent formerly enslaved people and their children from voting. Yet because these formerly enslaved people were now free persons, they were counted fully toward the state's congressional representation. Attempts at African American disenfranchisement continued until the civil rights struggle of the 1960s finally brought about the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The act cleared several final hurdles to voter registration and voting for African Americans. Following its adoption, Many Democrats led the charge to create congressional districts that would enhance the power of African American voters.

The idea was to create majority-minority districts within states. Districts in which African Americans became the majority and thus gained the electoral power to send representatives to Congress. While the strangely drawn districts succeeded in their stated goals, nearly quintupling the number of African American representatives in Congress in just over two decades, they have frustrated others who claim they are merely a new form of an old practice, gerrymandering.

Gerrymandering is the manipulation of legislative district boundaries as a way of favoring a particular candidate. The term combines the word salamander, a reference to the strange shape of these districts, with the name of Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry, who in 1812 signed a redistricting plan. designed to benefit his party. Despite the questionable ethics behind gerrymandering, the practice is legal, and both major parties have used it to their benefit. It is only when political redistricting appears to dilute the votes of racial minorities that gerrymandering efforts can be challenged under the Voting Rights Act.

Other forms of gerrymandering are frequently employed in states where a dominant party seeks to maintain that domination. As we saw in the chapter on political parties, gerrymandering can be a tactic to draw district lines in a way that creates safe seats for a particular political party. In states like Maryland, these are safe seats for Democrats.

In states like Louisiana, they are safe seats for Republicans. Finding a Middle Ground, Racial Gerrymandering and the Paradox of Minority Representation In Ohio, one skirts the shoreline of Lake Erie like a snake. In Louisiana, one meanders across the southern part of the state from the eastern shore of Lake Pontchartrain through much of New Orleans and north along the Mississippi River to Baton Rouge. And in Illinois, another wraps around the city of Chicago and its suburbs in a wandering line that, when seen on a map, looks like the mouth of a large bearded alligator attempting to drink from Lake Michigan. These aren't geographical features or large infrastructure projects.

Rather, they are racially gerrymandered congressional districts. Their strange shapes are the product of careful district restructuring organized around the goal of enhancing the votes of minority groups. The Alligator Mouth District 4 in Illinois, for example, was drawn to bring a number of geographically autonomous Latino groups in Illinois together in the same congressional district.

While the strategy of creating majority-minority districts has been a success for minorities'representation in Congress, its long-term effect has revealed a disturbing paradox. Congress as a whole has become less enthusiastic about minority-specific issues. How is this possible? The problem is that by creating districts with high percentages of minority constituents, strategists have made the other districts less diverse. The representatives in those districts are under very little pressure to consider the interests of minority groups.

As a result, they typically do not. What changes might help correct this problem? Are majority minority districts no longer an effective strategy for increasing minority representation in Congress? Are there better ways to achieve a higher level of minority representation? Congressional Powers The authority to introduce and pass legislation is a very strong power, but it is only one of the many that Congress possesses.

In general, congressional powers can be divided into three types—enumerated, implied, and inherent. An enumerated power is a power explicitly stated in the Constitution. An implied power is one not specifically detailed in the Constitution, but inferred as necessary to achieve the objectives of the national government.

And an inherent power, while not enumerated or implied, must be assumed to exist as a direct result of the country's existence. In this section, we will learn about each type of power and the foundations of legitimacy they claim. We will also learn about the way the different branches of government have historically appropriated powers not previously granted to them, and the way congressional power has recently suffered in this process. Article 1, Section 8 of the U.S.

Constitution details the enumerated powers of the legislature. These include the power to levy and collect taxes, declare war, raise an army and navy, coin money, borrow money, regulate commerce among the states and with foreign nations, establish federal courts and bankruptcy rules, establish rules for immigration and naturalization, and issue patents and copyrights. Other powers, such as the power of Congress to establish federal courts below the Supreme Court, are found elsewhere in the Constitution.

Article 3, Section 1. The first of these enumerated powers to levy taxes is quite possibly the most important power Congress possesses. Without it, most of the others, whether enumerated, implied, or inherent, would be largely theoretical. The power to levy and collect taxes, along with the appropriations power, gives Congress what is typically referred to as the power of the purse. This means Congress controls the money. Some enumerated powers invested in the Congress were included specifically to serve as checks on the other powerful branches of government.

These include Congress's sole power to introduce legislation, the Senate's final say on many presidential nominations and treaties signed by the president, and the House's ability to impeach or formally accuse the president or other federal officials of wrongdoing. The first step in removing the person from office, the second step, trial and removal, takes place in the U.S. Senate.

Each of these powers also grants Congress oversight of the actions of the president and the administration, that is, the right to review and monitor other bodies such as the executive branch. The fact that Congress has the sole power to introduce legislation effectively limits the power of the president. to develop the same laws the president is empowered to enforce. The Senate's exclusive power to give final approval for many of the president's nominees, including cabinet members and judicial appointments, compels the president to consider the needs and desires of Congress when selecting top government officials.

Finally, removing a president from office who has been elected by the entire country should never be done lightly. Giving this responsibility to a large... deliberative body of elected officials ensures it will occur only very rarely.

Despite the fact that the Constitution outlines specific enumerated powers, most of the actions Congress takes on a day-to-day basis are not actually included in this list. The reason is that the Constitution not only gives Congress the power to make laws, but also gives it some general direction as to what those laws should accomplish. The Necessary and Proper Clause directs Congress to, quote, make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the government of the United States or in any department or officer thereof. Laws that regulate banks, establish a minimum wage, and allow for the construction and maintenance of interstate highways are all possible because of the implied powers granted. by the Necessary and Proper Clause.

Today, the overwhelming portion of Congress's work is tied to the Necessary and Proper Clause. Finally, Congress's inherent powers are unlike either the enumerated or the implied powers. Inherent powers are not only not mentioned in the Constitution, but they do not even have a convenient clause in the Constitution to provide for them.

Instead, they are powers Congress has determined it must assume if the government is going to work at all. The general assumption is that these powers were deemed so essential to any functioning government that the framers saw no need to spell them out. Such powers include the power to control borders of the state, the power to expand the territory of the state, and the power to defend itself from internal revolution or coups. These powers are not granted to the Congress or to any other branch of the government for that matter, but they exist because the country exists.

In the early days of the Republic, Congress's role was rarely, if ever, disputed. However, with its decision in Marbury v. Madison, 1803, the Supreme Court asserted its authority over judicial review and assumed the power to declare laws unconstitutional. Yet even after that decision, the court was reluctant to use this power and didn't do so for over half a century. Initially, the presidency was also a fairly weak branch of government compared with the legislature.

But presidents have sought to increase their power almost from the beginning, typically at the expense of Congress. By the nature of the enumerated powers provided to the president, it is during wartime that the chief executive is most powerful and Congress least powerful. For example, President Abraham Lincoln, who oversaw the prosecution of the Civil War, stretched the bounds of his legal authority in a number of ways. such as by issuing the Emancipation Proclamation that freed enslaved people in the Confederate States. In the 20th century, the modern tussle over power between the Congress and the President really began.

There are two primary reasons this struggle emerged. First, as the country grew larger and more complex, the need for the government to assert its regulatory power grew. The executive branch, because of its hierarchical organization with with the president at the top, is naturally seen as a more smoothly run governmental machine than the cumbersome Congress.

This gives the president advantages in the struggle for power, and indeed gives Congress an incentive to delegate authority to the president on processes such as trade agreements and national monument designations that would be difficult for the legislature to carry out. The second reason has to do with the president's powers as commander-in-chief. in the realm of foreign policy. The twin disasters of the Great Depression in the 1930s and World War II, which lasted until the mid-1940s, provided President Franklin D. Roosevelt with a powerful platform from which to expand presidential power. His popularity, and his ability to be elected four times, allowed him to greatly overshadow Congress.

As a result, Congress attempted to restrain the power of the presidency by proposing the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution, which limited a president to only two full terms in office. Although this limitation is a significant one, it has not held back the tendency for the presidency to assume increased power. In the decades following World War II, the United States entered the Cold War, a seemingly endless conflict with the Soviet Union, without actual war, and therefore a period that allowed the presidency to assert more authority, especially in foreign affairs. In an exercise of this increased power, in the 1950s, President Harry Truman effectively went around and enumerated power of Congress by sending troops into battle in Korea without a congressional declaration of war.

By the time of the Kennedy administration in the 1960s, the presidency had assumed nearly all responsibility for creating foreign policy, effectively shutting Congress out. Following the twin scandals of Vietnam and Watergate in the early 1970s, Congress attempted to assert itself as a co-equal branch, even in creating foreign policy, but could not hold back the trend. The War Powers Resolution, covered in the Foreign Policy chapter, was intended to strengthen congressional war powers. but ended up clarifying presidential authority in the first 60 days of a military conflict. The war on terrorism after 9-11 has also strengthened the president's hand.

Today, the seemingly endless bickering between the president and the Congress is a reminder of the ongoing struggle for power between the branches, and indeed between the parties in Washington, D.C. Presidential use of executive orders on domestic policy and executive agreements on foreign policy allowed in areas in which Congress has delegated authority to the presidents, have furthered this trend. When used, they replace legislation and treaties. Finding a middle ground. Understanding the limits of Congress's power to regulate. One of the most important constitutional anchors for Congress's implicit power to regulate all manner of activities within the states is the short- Clause in Article I, Section 8, which says Congress is empowered to regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the several states and with Indian tribes.

The Supreme Court's broad interpretation of this so-called Commerce Clause has greatly expanded the power and reach of Congress over the centuries. From the earliest days of the Republic until the end of the 19th century, the Supreme Court consistently handed down decisions that effectively broadened the Congress's power to regulate interstate and intrastate commerce. The growing country, the demands of its expanding economy, and the way changes in technology and transportation contributed to the shrinking of space between the states demanded that Congress be able to function as a regulator. For a short period in the 1930s, when federal authority was expanded to combat the Great Depression, the court began to interpret the Commerce Clause far more narrowly.

But after this interlude, the court's interpretation swung in an even broader direction. This change proved particularly important in the 1960s, when Congress rolled back racial segregation throughout much of the South and beyond. And in the 1970s, as federal environmental regulations and programs took root. But in United States v. Lopez, a decision issued in 1995, the court changed course again and, for the first time in half a century, struck down a law as an unconstitutional overstepping of the Commerce Clause. Five years later, the court did it again, convincing many that the country may be witnessing the beginning of a rollback in Congress's power to regulate in the states.

When the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, also known as the ACA or Obamacare, came before the Supreme Court in 2012, many believed the court would strike it down. Instead, the justices took the novel approach of upholding the law based on the Congress's enumerated power to tax, rather than the Commerce Clause. The decision was a shock to many, and by not upholding the law on the basis of the Commerce Clause, The court left open the possibility that it would continue to pursue a narrower interpretation of the clause.

What are the advantages of the Supreme Court's broad interpretation of the Commerce Clause? How do you think this interpretation affects the balance of power between the branches of government? Why are some people concerned that the court's view of the clause could change?

11.2 Congressional Elections Learning Objectives By the end of this section, you will be able to Explain how fundamental characteristics of the House and Senate shape their elections Discuss campaign funding and the effects of incumbency in the House and Senate Analyze the way congressional elections can sometimes become nationalized The House and Senate operate very differently, partly because their members differ in the length of their terms, as well as in their age and other characteristics. In this section, we will explore why constitutional rules affect the elections for the two types of representatives and the reason the two bodies function differently by design. We also look at campaign finance to better understand how legislators get elected and stay elected. Understanding the House and Senate The U.S. Constitution is very clear about who can be elected as a member of the House or Senate. A House member must be a U.S. citizen of at least seven years standing and at least 25 years old.

Senators are required to have nine years standing as citizens and be at least 30 years old when sworn in. Representatives serve two-year terms, whereas senators serve six-year terms. Per the Supreme Court decision in U.S. Term Limits v. Thornton, 1995, there are currently no term limits for either senators or representatives, despite efforts by many states to impose them in the mid-1990s. House members are elected by the voters in their specific congressional districts.

There are currently 435 congressional districts in the United States, and thus 435 House members. and each state has a number of House districts roughly proportional to its share of the total U.S. population, with states guaranteed at least one House member. Two senators are elected by each state.

The structural and other differences between the House and Senate have practical consequences for the way the two chambers function. The House of Representatives has developed a stronger and more structured leadership than the Senate. Because its members serve short, two-year terms, they must regularly answer to the demands of their constituency.

when they run for election or reelection. Even House members of the same party in the same state will occasionally disagree on issues because of the different interests of their specific districts. Thus, the House can be highly partisan at times.

In contrast, members of the Senate are furthest from the demands and scrutiny of their constituents. Because of their longer six-year terms, they will see every member of the House face constituents multiple times before they themselves are forced to seek re-election. Originally, when a state's two U.S. Senators were appointed by the state legislature, the Senate's chamber's distance from the electorate was even greater.

Also, unlike members of the House who can seek the narrower interests of their district, Senators must maintain a broader appeal in order to earn a majority of the votes across their entire state. In addition, the rules of the Senate allow individual members to slow down or stop legislation they dislike. These structural differences between the two chambers create real differences in the actions of their members. The heat of popular, sometimes fleeting demands from constituents often glows red-hot in the House. The Senate has the flexibility to allow these passions to cool.

Dozens of major initiatives were passed by the House and had a willing president, for example, only to be defeated in the Senate. In 2012, the Buffett rule would have implemented a minimum tax rate of 30% on wealthy Americans. Sixty senators had to agree to bring it to a vote, but the bill fell short of that number and died.

Similarly, although the ACA became widely known as Obamacare, The president did not send a piece of legislation to Capitol Hill. He asked Congress to write the bills. Both the House and Senate authored their own versions of the legislation. The House's version was much bolder and larger in terms of establishing a national health care system. However, it did not stand a chance in the Senate, where a more moderate version of the legislation was introduced.

In the end, House leaders saw the Senate version as preferable to doing nothing, and ultimately supported it. Congressional campaign funding. Modern political campaigns in the United States are expensive, and they have been growing more so.

For example, in 1986, the costs of running a successful House and Senate campaign were approximately $849,000 and $7.2 million, respectively, in 2022 dollars. By 2020, those values had shot to $2.4 million and $27.2 million. Raising this amount of money takes quite a bit of time and effort.

Indeed, a presentation for incoming Democratic representatives suggested a daily Washington schedule of five hours reaching out to donors, while only three or four were to be used for actual congressional work. As this advice reveals, raising money for re-election constitutes a large proportion of the work a congressperson does. This has caused many to wonder whether the amount of money in politics has truly become a corrupting influence.

However, overall, the lion's share of direct campaign contributions in congressional elections comes from individual donors, who are less influential than the political action committees that contribute the remainder. Nevertheless, the complex problem of funding campaigns has a long history in the United States. For nearly the first hundred years of the republic, there were no federal campaign finance laws.

Then, between the late 19th century and the start of World War I, Congress pushed through a flurry of reforms intended to bring order to the world of campaign finance. These laws made it It illegal for politicians to solicit contributions from civil service workers, made corporate contributions illegal, and required candidates to report their fundraising. As politicians and donors soon discovered, however, these laws were full of loopholes and were easily skirted by those who knew the ins and outs of the system.

Another handful of reform attempts were therefore pushed through in the wake of World War II, but then Congress neglected campaign finance reform for a few decades. That lull ended in the early 1970s, when the Federal Election Campaign Act was passed. Among other things, it created the Federal Election Commission, FEC, required candidates to disclose where their money was coming from and where they were spending it, limited individual contributions, and provided for public financing of presidential campaigns.

Another important reform occurred in 2002, when Senators John McCain, Republican from Arizona, and Russell Feingold, Democrat from Wisconsin, drafted and Congress passed The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, BCRA, also referred to as the McCain-Feingold Act. The purpose of this law was to limit the use of soft money, which is raised for purposes like party-building efforts, get-out-the-vote efforts, and issue advocacy ads. Unlike hard money, contributed directly to a candidate, which is heavily regulated and limited, soft money had almost no regulations or limits.

It had never been a problem before the mid-1990s, when a number of very imaginative political operatives developed a great many ways to spend this money. After that, soft money donations skyrocketed, but the McCain-Feingold bill greatly limited this type of fundraising. McCain-Feingold placed limits on total contributions to political parties, prohibited coordination between candidates and PAC campaigns, to include personal endorsements on their political ads.

Until 2010, it also limited advertisements run by unions and corporations 30 days before a primary and 60 days before a general election. The FEC's enforcement of the law spurred numerous court cases challenging it. The most controversial decision was handed down by the Supreme Court in 2010, whose ruling on Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission led to the removal of spending limits on corporations. Justices in the majority argued that the BCRA violated a corporation's free speech rights. The Citizens United case began as a lawsuit against the FEC, filed by Citizens United, a nonprofit organization that wanted to advertise a documentary critical of former Senator and Democratic hopeful Hillary Clinton.

on the eve of the 2008 Democratic primaries. Advertising or showing the film during this time window was prohibited by the McCain-Feingold Act. But the court found that this type of restriction violated the organization's First Amendment right to free speech.

As critics of the decision predicted at the time, the court thus opened the floodgates to private soft money flowing into campaigns again. In the wake of the Citizens United decision, a new type of advocacy group emerged, the Super PAC. A traditional PAC is an organization designed to raise hard money to elect or defeat candidates.

Such PACs tended to be run by businesses and other groups like the Teamsters Union and the National Rifle Association to support their special interests. They are highly regulated in regard to the amount of money they can take in and spend, but Super PACs aren't bound by these regulations. While they cannot give money directly to a candidate or a candidate's party, they can raise and spend unlimited funds, and they can spend independently of a campaign or party.

In the 2020 election cycle, for example, Super PAC spent just over $2 billion and raised about $1.3 billion more. At the same time, however, several limits on campaign contributions have been upheld by the courts and remain in place. Individuals may contribute up to $2,900 per candidate per election. Individuals may also give $5,000 to PACs and $36,500 to a national party committee.

The PACs that contribute to more than one candidate are permitted to contribute $5,000 per candidate per election and up to $15,000 to a national party. Packs created to give money only to one candidate are limited to only $2,900 per candidate, however. The amounts are adjusted every two years based on inflation.

These limits are intended to create a more equal playing field for the candidates so that candidates must raise their campaign funds from a broad pool of contributors. Incumbency effects Not surprisingly, The jungle of campaign financing regulations and loopholes is more easily navigated by incumbents in Congress than by newcomers. Incumbents are elected officials who currently hold an office.

The amount of money they raise against their challengers demonstrates their advantage. In 2020, for example, the average Senate incumbent raised approximately $28.6 million, whereas the average challenger raised only $5.2 million. This is one of the many reasons incumbents win a large majority of congressional races.

each electoral cycle. Incumbents attract more money because people want to give to a winner. In the House, the percentage of incumbents winning re-election has hovered between 85 and 100 percent for the last half century. In the Senate, there is only slightly more variation given the statewide nature of the race, but it is still a very high majority of incumbents who win re-election.

As these rates show, Even in the worst political environments, incumbents are very difficult to defeat. The historical difficulty of unseating an incumbent in the House or Senate is often referred to as the incumbent advantage or the incumbency effect. The advantage in financing is a huge part of this effect, but it is not the only important part. Incumbents often have a much higher level of name recognition, all things being equal.

Voters are far more likely to select the name of the person they recall seeing on television and hearing on the radio for the last few years than the name of a person they hardly know. And donors are more likely to want to give to a proven winner. But more important is the way the party system itself privileges incumbents. A large percentage of congressional districts across the country are safe seats in uncompetitive districts. meaning candidates from a particular party are highly likely to consistently win the seat.

This means the functional decision in these elections occurs during the primary, not in the general election. Political parties in general prefer to support incumbents in elections because the general consensus is that incumbents are better candidates, and their record of success lends support to this conclusion. That said, While the political parties themselves to a degree control and regulate the primaries, popular individual candidates and challengers sometimes rule the day. This has especially been the case in recent years, as conservative incumbents have been primaried by challengers more conservative than they. Another reason incumbents wield a great advantage over their challengers is the state power they have at their disposal.

One of the many responsibilities of a sitting congressperson is constituent casework. Constituents routinely reach out to their congressperson for powerful support to solve complex problems, such as applying for and tracking federal benefits or resolving immigration and citizenship challenges. Incumbent members of Congress have paid staff, influence, and access to specialized information that can help their constituents in ways other persons cannot.

And Congresspersons are hardly reticent about their efforts to support their constituents. Often, they will publicize their casework on their websites, or in some cases create television advertisements that boast of their helpfulness. Election history has demonstrated that this form of publicity is very effective in garnering the support of voters. Insider Perspective The End of Incumbency Advantage At the start of 2014, House Majority Whip Eric Cantor, a representative from Virginia, was at the top of his game. He was handsome, popular with talk show hosts and powerful insiders, an impressive campaign fundraiser and speaker, and apparently destined to become Speaker of the House when the current Speaker stepped down.

Four months later, Cantor lost the opportunity to run for his own congressional seat in a shocking primary election upset. that shook the Washington political establishment to its core. What happened? How did such a powerful incumbent lose a game in which the cards had been stacked so heavily in his favor?

Analyses of the stunning defeat quickly showed there were more chinks in Cantor's polished armor than most wanted to admit, but his weakness wasn't that he was unable to play the political game. Rather, he may have learned to play it too well. He became seen as too much of a Washington insider. Cantor's ambition, political skill, deep connections to political insiders, and ability to come out squeaky clean after even the dirtiest political tussling should have given him a clear advantage over any competitor. But in the political environment of 2014, when conservative voices around the country criticized the party for ignoring the people and catering to political insiders, his strengths became weaknesses.

Indeed, Cantor was the only highest-level Republican representative sacrificed to conservative populism. Were the winds of change blowing for incumbents? Between 1946 and 2012, Only 5% of incumbent senators and 2% of House incumbents lost their party primaries.

In 2014, Cantor was one of four House incumbents who did so, while no incumbent senator suffered defeat. All evidence suggests the incumbent advantage, especially in the primary system, is alive and well. The story of Eric Cantor may very well be the classic case of an exception proving the rule.

If you are a challenger running against an incumbent, what are some strategies you could use to make the race competitive? Would Congress operate differently if challengers defeated incumbents more often? Local and national elections. The importance of airing positive constituent casework during campaigns is a testament to the accuracy of saying all politics is local. This phrase attributed to former Speaker of the House Tip O'Neill, Democrat from Massachusetts, essentially means that the most important motivations directing voters are rooted in local concerns.

In general, this is true. People naturally feel more driven by the things that affect them on a daily basis. These are concerns like the quality of the roads, the availability of good jobs, and the cost and quality of public education.

Good senators and representatives understand this and will seek to use their influence and power in office to affect these issues for the better. This is an age-old strategy for success in office and elections. Political scientists have taken note of some voting patterns that appear to challenge this common assumption, however.

In 1960, political scientist Angus Campbell proposed the surge and decline theory to explain these patterns. Campbell noticed that since the Civil War, with the exception of 1934, the president's party has consistently lost seats in Congress during the midterm elections. He proposed that the reason was a surge in political stimulation during presidential elections, which contributes to greater turnout and brings in voters who are ordinarily less interested in politics. These voters, Campbell argued, tend to favor the party holding the presidency. In contrast, midterm elections witness the opposite effect.

They are less stimulating and have lower turnout because less interested voters stay home. This shift in Campbell's theory provides an advantage to the party not currently occupying the presidency. In the decades since Campbell's influential theory was published, a number of studies have challenged his conclusions.

Nevertheless, the pattern of midterm elections benefiting the president's opposition has persisted. Only in exceptional years has this pattern been broken. First, in 1998, during President Bill Clinton's second term and the Monica Lewinsky scandal, when exit polls indicated most voters opposed the idea of impeaching the president. And then again in 2002, following the 9-11 terrorist attacks and the ensuing declaration of a war on terror. The evidence does suggest that national concerns, rather than local ones, can function as powerful motivators at the polls.

Consider, for example, the role of the Iraq War in bringing about a democratic route of the Republicans in the House in 2006 and in the Senate in 2008. Unlike previous wars in Europe and Vietnam, the war in Iraq was fought by a very small percentage of the population. majority of citizens were not soldiers. Few had relatives fighting in the war, and most did not know anyone who directly suffered from the prolonged conflict.

Voters in large numbers were motivated by the political and economic disaster of the war to vote for politicians they believed would end it. Congressional elections may be increasingly driven by national issues. Just two decades ago, straight-ticket party-line voting was still relatively rare. across most of the country. In much of the South, which began to vote overwhelmingly Republican in presidential elections during the 1960s and 1970s, Democrats were still commonly elected to the House and Senate.

The candidates themselves and the important local issues, apart from party affiliation, were important drivers in congressional elections. This began to change in the 1980s and 1990s, as Democratic representatives across the region began to dwindle. And the South isn't alone.

Areas in the Northeast and the Northwest have grown increasingly Democratic. Indeed, the 2014 midterm election was the most nationalized election in many decades, and that trend has continued since. Voters who favor a particular party in a presidential election are now much more likely to also support that same party in House and Senate elections than was the case just a few decades ago.

11.3 Congressional Representation Learning Objectives. By the end of this section, you will be able to explain the basics of representation, describe the extent to which Congress as a body represents the U.S. population, explain the concept of collective representation, describe the forces that influence congressional approval ratings. The tension between local and national politics described in the previous section.

is essentially a struggle between interpretations of representation. Representation is a complex concept. It can mean paying careful attention to the concerns of constituents, understanding that representatives must act as they see fit based on what they feel best for the constituency, or relying on the particular ethnic, racial, or gender diversity of those in office. In this section, we will explore three different models of representation.

and the concept of descriptive representation. We will look at the way members of Congress navigate the challenging terrain of representation as they serve and all the many predictable and unpredictable consequences of the decisions they make. Types of Representation Looking Out for Constituents By definition and title, Senators and House members are representatives. This means they are intended to be drawn from local populations around the country so they can speak for and make decisions for those local populations, their constituents, while serving in their respective legislative houses. That is, representation refers to unelected leaders looking out for constituents while carrying out the duties of the office.

Theoretically, the process of constituents voting regularly and reaching out to their representatives helps these congresspersons better represent them. It is considered a given by some in representative democracies that representatives will seldom ignore the wishes of constituents, especially on salient issues that directly affect the district or state. In reality, the job of representing in Congress is often quite complicated, and elected leaders do not always know where their constituents stand, nor do constituents always agree on everything. Navigating their sometimes contradictory demands and balancing them with the demands of the party, powerful interest groups, ideological concerns, the legislative body, their own personal beliefs, and the country as a whole can be a complicated and frustrating process for representatives.

Traditionally, representatives have seen their role as that of a delegate or trustee or someone attempting to balance the two. Representatives who see themselves as delegates believe they are empowered merely to enact the wishes of constituents. Delegates must employ some means to identify the views of their constituents and then vote accordingly.

They are not permitted the liberty of employing their own reason and judgment while acting as representatives in Congress. This is the delegate model of representation. In contrast, a representative who understands their role to be that of a trustee believes they are entrusted by the constituents with the power to use good judgment to make decisions on the constituents'behalf. In the words of the 18th century British philosopher Edmund Burke, who championed the trustee model of representation, Parliament is not a Congress of ambassadors from different and hostile interests. It is rather a deliberative assembly of one nation with one interest, that of the whole.

In the modern setting, trustee representatives will look to party consensus, and the other party will look to party consensus. party leadership, powerful interests, the team members'own personal views, and national trends to better identify the voting choices they should make. Understandably, Few, if any, representatives adhere strictly to one model or the other.

Instead, most find themselves attempting to balance the important principles embedded in each. Political scientists call this the politico model of representation. In it, members of Congress act as either trustee or delegate, based on rational political calculations about who is best served, the constituency or the nation.

For example, every representative, regardless of party or conservative versus liberal leanings, must remain firm in support of some ideologies and resistant to others. On the political right, an issue that demands support might be gun rights. On the left, it might be a woman's right to an abortion. For votes related to such issues, representatives will likely pursue a delegate approach.

For other issues, Especially complex questions the public at large has little patience for, such as subtle economic reforms, representatives will tend to follow a trustee approach. This is not to say their decisions on these issues run contrary to public opinion. Rather, it merely means they are not acutely aware of, or cannot adequately measure, the extent to which their constituents support or reject the proposals at hand. It could also mean that the issue is not salient to their constituents. Congress works on hundreds of different issues each year, and constituents are likely not aware of the particulars of most of them.

Descriptive Representation in Congress In some cases, representation can seem to have very little to do with the substantive issues representatives in Congress tend to debate. Instead, proper representation for some is rooted in the racial, ethnic, socioeconomic, gender, and sexual identity of the representatives themselves. This form of representation is called descriptive representation. At one time, there was relatively little concern about descriptive representation in Congress.

A major reason is that until well into the 20th century, white men of European background constituted an overwhelming majority of the voting population. African Americans were routinely deprived of the opportunity to participate in democracy, and Hispanics and other minority groups were fairly insignificant in number and excluded by the states. While women in many Western states could vote sooner, all women were not able to exercise their right to vote nationwide until passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920, and they began to make up more than 5% of either chamber only in the 1990s. Many advances in women's rights have been the result of women's greater engagement in politics and representation in the halls of government, especially since the founding of the National Organization for Women in 1966 and the National Women's Political Caucus, NWPC, in 1971. The NWPC was formed by Bella Abzug, Gloria Steinem, Shirley Chisholm, and other leading feminists to encourage women's participation in political parties, elect women to office, and raise money for their campaigns. For example, Patsy Mink, Democrat from Hawaii, the first Asian American woman elected to Congress, was the co-author of the Education Amendments Act of 1972, Title IX of which prohibits sex discrimination in education.

Mink had been interested in fighting discrimination in education since her youth. when she opposed racial segregation in campus housing while a student at the University of Nebraska. She went to law school after being denied admission to medical school because of her gender.

Like Mink, many other women sought and won political office, many with the help of the NWPC. Today, Emily's List, a PAC founded in 1985 to help elect pro-choice Democratic women to office, plays a major role in fundraising for female candidates. In the 2018 midterm elections, 34 women endorsed by Emily's List won election to the U.S. House.

In 2020, the Republicans took a page from the Democrats'playbook when they made the recruitment and support of quality female candidates a priority and increased the number of Republican women in the House from 13 to 28, including 10 seats formerly held. by Democrats. In the wake of the civil rights movement, African American representatives also began to enter Congress in increasing numbers.

In 1971, to better represent their interests, these representatives founded the Congressional Black Caucus, CBC, an organization that grew out of a Democratic select committee formed in 1969. Founding members of the CBC include Ralph Metcalf, Democrat from Illinois, a former sprinter from Chicago who had meddled at both the Los Angeles 1932 and Berlin 1936 Olympic Games, and Shirley Chisholm, a founder of the NWPC and the first African American woman to be elected to the House of Representatives. In recent decades, Congress has become much more descriptively representative of the United States. The 117th Congress, which began in January 2021, had a historically large percentage of racial and ethnic minorities. African Americans made up the largest percentage.

with 62 members, including two delegates and two people who would soon resign to serve in the executive branch, while Latinos accounted for 54 members, including two delegates and the resident commissioner of Puerto Rico, up from 30 just a decade before. Yet, demographically speaking, Congress as a whole is still a long way from where the country is and is composed of largely white wealthy men. For example, Although more than half the U.S. population is female, only 25% of Congress is. Congress is also overwhelmingly Christian. Representing constituents.

Ethnic, racial, gender, or ideological identity aside, it is a representative's actions in Congress that ultimately reflect their understanding of representation. Congress members'most important function as lawmakers is writing, supporting and passing bills. And as representatives of their constituents, they are charged with addressing those constituents'interests.

Historically, this job has included what some have affectionately called bringing home the bacon, but what many, usually those outside the district in question, call pork barrel politics. As a term and a practice, pork barrel politics, federal spending on projects designed to benefit a particular district or set of constituents, has been around since the 19th century, when barrels of salt pork were both a sign of wealth and a system of reward. While pork barrel politics are often deplored during presidential elections, and earmarks, funds appropriated for specific projects, are no longer permitted in Congress, legislative control of local appropriations nevertheless still exists. In more formal language, Allocation, or the influencing of the national budget in ways that help the district or state, can mean securing funds for a specific district's project, like an airport, or getting tax breaks for certain types of agriculture or manufacturing. Such budgetary allocations aren't always looked upon favorably by constituents.

Consider, for example, the passage of the ACA in 2010. The desire for comprehensive universal health care had been a driving position of the Democrats since at least the 1960s. During the 2008 campaign, that desire was so great among both Democrats and Republicans that both parties put forth plans. When the Democrats took control of Congress and the presidency in 2009, they quickly began putting together their plan. Soon, however, the politics grew complex, and the proposed plan became very contentious for the Republican Party. Nevertheless, the desire to make good on a decades-old political promise compelled the Democrats to do everything in their power to pass something.

They offered sympathetic members of the Republican Party valuable budgetary concessions. They attempted to include allocations they hoped the opposition might feel compelled to support. And they drafted the bill in a purposely complex manner to avoid future challenges.

These efforts, however, had the opposite effect. The Republican Party's constituency interpreted the allocations as bribery and the bill as inherently flawed and felt it should be scrapped entirely. The more Democrats dug in, the more frustrated the Republicans became.

The Republican opposition, which took control of the House during the 2010 midterm elections, promised constituents they would repeal the law. Their attempts were complicated, however. by the fact that Democrats still held the Senate and the presidency.

Yet, the desire to represent the interests of their constituents compelled Republicans to use another tool at their disposal, the symbolic vote. During the 112th and 113th Congresses, Republicans voted more than 60 times to either repeal or severely limit the reach of the law. They understood these efforts had little to no chance of ever making it to the president's desk.

And if they did, he would certainly have vetoed them. But it was important for these representatives to demonstrate to their constituents that they understood their wishes and were willing to act on them. Historically, representatives have been able to balance their role as members of a national legislative body with their role as representatives of a smaller community.

The Obamacare fight, however, gave a boost to the growing concern that the power structure in Washington divides representatives from the needs of their constituency. This has exerted pressure on representatives, to the extent that some now pursue a more straightforward delegate approach to representation. Indeed. Following the 2010 election, a handful of Republicans began living in their offices in Washington, convinced that by not establishing a residence in Washington, they would appear closer to their constituents at home. Get connected.

Language and metaphor. The language and metaphors of war and violence are common in politics. Candidates routinely smell blood in the water, battle for delegates, go head-to-head, and make heads roll.

But the references to actual violence aren't the only metaphorical devices commonly used in politics. Another is mentions of food. Powerful speakers frequently throw red meat to the crowds, careful politicians prefer to stick to meat and potato issues, and representatives are frequently encouraged by their constituents to bring home the bacon.

And the way members of Congress typically bring home the bacon is often described with another agricultural metaphor, the earmark. In ranching, an earmark is a small cut on the ear of a cow or other animal to denote ownership. Similarly, in Congress, an earmark is a mark in a bill that directs some of the bill's funds to be spent on specific projects or for specific tax exemptions. Since the 1980s, the earmark has become a common vehicle for sending money to various projects around the country.

Many a road, hospital, and airport can trace its origins back to a few skillfully drafted earmarks. Relatively few people outside Congress had ever heard of the term before the 2008 presidential election, when Republican nominee Senator John McCain touted his career-long refusal to use the earmark as a testament to his commitment to reforming spending habits in Washington. McCain's criticism of the earmark as a form of corruption cast a shadow over a previously common legislative practice. As the country sank into recession and Congress tried to use spending bills to stimulate the economy, the public grew more acutely aware of its earmarking habits.

Congresspersons then were eager to distance themselves from the practice. In fact, the use of earmarks to encourage Republicans to help pass health care reform actually made the bill less popular with the public. In 2011, after Republicans took over the House, they outlawed earmarks. But with deadlocks and stalemates becoming more common, some quiet voices have begun asking for a return to the practice. They argue that Congress works because representatives can satisfy their responsibilities to their constituents by making deals.

The earmarks are those deals. By taking them away, Congress has hampered its own ability to bring home the bacon. Are earmarks a vital part of legislating or a corrupt practice that was rightly jettisoned?

Pick a cause or industry and investigate whether any earmarks ever favored it. Or research the way earmarks have hurt or helped your state or district and decide for yourself. Follow-up activity. Find out where your congressional representative stands on the ban on earmarks. and right to support or dissuade them.

Collective representation and congressional approval. The concept of collective representation describes the relationship between Congress and the United States as a whole. That is, it considers whether the institution itself represents the American people, not just whether a particular member of Congress represents their district. Predictably, It is far more difficult for Congress to maintain a level of collective representation than it is for individual members of Congress to represent their own constituents.

Not only is Congress a mixture of different ideologies, interests, and party affiliations, but the collective constituency of the United States has an even greater level of diversity. Nor is it a solution to attempt to match the diversity of opinions and interests in the United States with those in Congress. Indeed, such an attempt would likely make it more difficult for Congress to maintain collective representation. Its rules and procedures require Congress to use flexibility, bargaining, and concessions.

Yet, it is this flexibility and these concessions, which many now interpret as corruption, that tend to engender the high public disapproval ratings experienced by Congress. After many years of deadlocks and bickering on Capitol Hill, the national perception of Congress has tended to run under 20% approval in recent years, with large majorities disapproving. Through mid-2021, the Congress, narrowly under Democratic control, was receiving higher approval ratings, above 30%. However, congressional approval still lags public approval of the presidency and Supreme Court by a considerable margin.

In the two decades following the Watergate scandal in the early 1970s, the national approval rating of Congress hovered between 30 and 40%, then trended upward in the 1990s. before trending downward in the 21st century. Yet, incumbent re-elections have remained largely unaffected. The reason has to do with the remarkable ability of many in the United States to separate their distaste for Congress from their appreciation for their own representative.

Paradoxically, this tendency to hate the group but love one's own representative actually perpetuates the problem of poor congressional approval ratings. The reason is that it blunts voters'natural desire to replace those in power who are earning such low approval ratings. As decades of polling indicate, few events push congressional approval ratings above 50%.

Indeed, when the ratings are graphed, the two noticeable peaks are at 57% in 1998 and 84% in 2001. In 1998, according to Gallup Polling, The rise in approval accompanied a similar rise in other mood measures, including President Bill Clinton's approval ratings and general satisfaction with the state of the country and the economy. In 2001, approval spiked after the September 11 terrorist attacks and the Bush administration launched the War on Terror, sending troops first to Afghanistan and later to Iraq. War has the power to bring majorities of voters to view their Congress and president in an orderly fashion. overwhelmingly positive way. Nevertheless, all things being equal, citizens tend to rate Congress more highly when things get done, and more poorly when things do not get done.

For example, during the first half of President Obama's first term, Congress's approval rating reached a relative high of about 40%. Both houses were dominated by members of the president's own party, and many people were eager for Congress to take action to end the deep recession and begin to repair the economy. Millions were suffering economically, out of work or losing their jobs, and the idea that Congress was busy passing large stimulus packages, working on finance reform, and grilling unpopular bank CEOs and financial titans appealed to many.

Approval began to fade as the Republican Party slowed the wheels of Congress during the tumultuous debates over Obamacare and reached a low of 9% following the federal government shutdown. in October 2013. One of the events that began the approval rating's downward trend was Congress's divisive debate over national deficits. A deficit is what results when Congress spends more than it has available. It then conducts additional deficit spending by increasing the national debt. Many modern economists contend that during periods of economic decline, the nation should run deficits.

because additional government spending has a stimulative effect that can help restart a sluggish economy. Despite this benefit, voters rarely appreciate deficits. They see Congress as spending wastefully during a time when they themselves are cutting costs to get by. The disconnect between the common public perception of running a deficit and its legitimate policy goals is frequently exploited for political advantage. For example, while running for the presidency in 2008, Barack Obama slammed the deficit spending of the George W. Bush presidency, saying it was unpatriotic.

This sentiment echoed complaints Democrats had been issuing for years as a weapon against President Bush's policies. Following the election of President Obama and the Democratic takeover of the Senate, the concern over deficit spending shifted parties, with Republicans championing a spendthrift policy as a way of resisting Democratic policies. 11.4 House and Senate Organizations Learning Objectives By the end of this section, you will be able to explain the division of labor in the House and in the Senate, describe the way congressional committees develop and advance legislation.

Not all the business of Congress involves bickering, political infighting, government shutdowns, and Machiavellian maneuvering. Congress does actually get work done. Traditionally, it does this work in a very methodical way.

In this section, we will explore how Congress functions at the leadership and committee levels. We will learn how the party leadership controls their conferences and how the many committees within Congress create legislation that can then be moved forward or die on the floor. Party Leadership. The party leadership in Congress controls the actions of Congress. Leaders are elected by the two party conferences in each chamber.

In the House of Representatives, these are the House Democratic Conference and the House Republican Conference. These conferences meet regularly and separately, not only to elect their leaders, but also to discuss important issues and strategies for moving policy forward. Based on the number of members in each conference, one conference becomes the majority conference and the other becomes the minority conference. Independents like Senator Bernie Sanders will typically join one or the other major party conference. as a matter of practicality and often based on ideological affinity.

Without the membership to elect their own leadership, independents would have a very difficult time getting things done in Congress, unless they had a relationship with the leaders. Despite the power of the conferences, however, the most important leadership position in the House is actually elected by the entire body of representatives. This position is called the Speaker of the House.

and is the only House officer mentioned in the Constitution. The Constitution does not require the Speaker to be a member of the House, although to date, all 54 Speakers have been. The Speaker is the presiding officer, the administrative head of the House, the partisan leader of the majority party in the House, and an elected representative of a single congressional district.

As a testament to the importance of the Speaker since 1947, The holder of this position has been second in line to succeed the president in an emergency, after the vice president. The speaker serves until their party loses, or until the speaker is voted out of the position or chooses to step down. Republican Speaker John Boehner became the latest speaker to walk away from the position when it appeared his position was in jeopardy. This event shows how the party conference, or caucus, oversees the leadership as much as, if not more than, the leadership oversees the party membership in the chamber. The Speaker is invested with quite a bit of power, such as the ability to assign bills to committees and decide when a bill will be presented to the floor for a vote.

The Speaker also rules on House procedures, often delegating authority for certain duties to other members. He or she appoints members and chairs to committees. creates select committees to fulfill a specific purpose and then disband, and can even select a member to be Speaker pro tempore, who acts as Speaker in the Speaker's absence.

Finally, when the Senate joins the House in a joint session, the Speaker presides over these sessions, because they are usually held in the House of Representatives. Below the Speaker, the majority and minority conferences each elect two leadership positions arranged in hierarchical order. At the top of the hierarchy are the floor leaders of each party.

These are generally referred to as the majority and minority leaders. The minority leader has a visible, if not always a powerful position. As the official leader of the opposition, they technically hold the rank closest to that of the speaker, make strategy decisions, and attempt to keep order within the minority.

However, the majority rules the day in the House, like a cartel. On the majority side, because it holds the speakership, the majority leader also has considerable power. Historically, moreover, the majority leader tends to be in the best position to assume the speakership when the current speaker steps down.

Below these leaders are the two parties'respective whips. A whip's job, as the name suggests, is to whip up votes and otherwise enforce party discipline. Whips make the rounds in Congress, telling members the position of the leadership and the collective voting strategy. And sometimes they wave.

various carrots and sticks in front of recalcitrant members to bring them in line. The remainder of the leadership positions in the House include a handful of chairs and assistantships. Like the House, the Senate also has majority and minority leaders and whips, each with duties very similar to those of their counterparts in the House. Unlike the House, however, the Senate doesn't have a Speaker. The duties and powers held by the Speaker in the House fall to the majority leader in the Senate.

Another difference is that, according to the U.S. Constitution, the Senate's president is actually the elected vice president of the United States, but may only vote in case of a tie. Apart from this and very few other exceptions, the president of the Senate does not actually operate in the Senate.

Instead, the Constitution allows for the Senate to choose a president pro tempore. usually the most senior senator of the majority party, who presides over the Senate. Despite the title, the job is largely a formal and powerless role. The real power in the Senate is in the hands of the majority leader and the minority leader. Like the Speaker of the House, the majority leader is the chief spokesperson for the majority party, but unlike in the House, does not run the floor alone.

Because of the traditions of unlimited debate, and the filibuster. The majority and minority leaders often occupy the floor together in an attempt to keep things moving along. At times, their interactions are intense and partisan. But for the Senate to get things done, they must cooperate to get the 60 votes needed to run this supermajority legislative institution.

The committee system, with 535 members in Congress and a seemingly infinite number of domestic, international, economic, agricultural, regulatory, criminal, and military issues to deal with at any given moment, the two chambers must divide their work based on specialization. Congress does this through the committee system. Specialized committees, or subcommittees, in both the House and the Senate are where bills originate and most of the work that sets the congressional agenda takes place. Committees are roughly approximate to a bureaucratic department in the executive branch.

There are well over 200 committees, subcommittees, select committees, and joint committees in Congress. The core committees are called standing committees. There are 20 standing committees in the House and 16 in the Senate.

Members of both parties compete for positions on various committees. These positions are typically filled by majority and minority members to roughly approximate the ratio of majority to minority members in the respective chambers, although committees are chaired by members of the majority party. Committees and their chairs have a lot of power in the legislative process, including the ability to stop a bill from going to the floor, the full chamber, for a vote. Indeed, most bills die in committee.

But when a committee is eager to develop legislation, It takes a number of methodical steps. It will reach out to the relevant agencies for comment on resolutions to the problem at hand, such as by holding hearings with experts to collect information. In the Senate, committee hearings are also held to confirm presidential appointments.

After the information has been collected, the committee meets to discuss amendments and legislative language. Finally, the committee will send the bill to the full chamber, along with a committee report. The report...

provides the majority opinion about why the bill should be passed, a minority view to the contrary, and estimates of the proposed law's cost and impact. Four types of committees exist in the House and the Senate. The first is the standing or permanent committee.

This committee is the first call for proposed bills, fewer than 10% of which are reported out of committee to the floor. The second type is the joint committee. Joint committee members are appointed from both the House and the Senate and are charged with exploring a few key issues, such as the economy and taxation. However, joint committees have no bill referral authority whatsoever. They are informational only.

A conference committee is used to reconcile different bills passed in both the House and the Senate. The conference committees are appointed on an ad hoc basis as necessary when a bill passes the House and Senate in different forms. Conference committees are sometimes skipped in the interest of expedience.

in which one of the chambers relents to the other chamber. For example, the House demurred to the Senate over the Affordable Care Act, instead of going to battle in a conference committee. Still, conference committees are the norm on most major pieces of legislation. A recent example is the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, passed in December. Finally, ad hoc, special, or select committees are temporary committees set up to address specific topics.

These type of committees often conduct special investigations, such as on aging or ethics. Committee hearings can become politically driven public spectacles. Consider the House Select Committee on Benghazi, the committee assembled by Republicans to further investigate the 2011 attacks on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi, Libya.

This prolonged investigation became particularly partisan as Republicans focused on then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was running for the presidency at the time. In two multi-hour hearings, in which Secretary Clinton was the only witness, Republicans tended to grandstand in the hopes of gaining political advantage or tripping her up, while Democrats tended to use their time to ridicule Republicans. In the end, the long hearings uncovered little more.

than the elevated state of partisanship in the House, which had scarcely been a secret before. Members of Congress bring to their roles a variety of specific experiences, interests, and levels of expertise, and try to match these to committee positions. For example, House members from states with large agricultural interests will typically seek positions on the Agriculture Committee. Senate members with a background in banking or finance may seek positions on the Senate Finance Committee. Members can request these positions from their chamber's respective leadership.

And the leadership also selects the committee chairs. Committee chairs are very powerful. They control the committee's budget and choose when the committee will meet, when it will hold hearings, and even whether it will consider a bill. A chair can convene a meeting when members of the minority are absent, or adjourn a meeting when things are not progressing as the majority leadership wishes.

Chairs can hear a bill even when the rest of the committee objects. They do not remain in these powerful positions indefinitely, however. In the House, rules prevent committee chairs from serving more than six consecutive years and from serving as the chair of a subcommittee at the same time. A senator may serve only six years as a chair of a committee, but may in some instances also serve as a chair or ranking member.

of another committee. Because the Senate is much smaller than the House, Senators hold more committee assignments than House members. There are 16 standing committees in the Senate, and each position must be filled. In contrast, in the House, with 435 members and only 20 standing committees, committee members have time to pursue a more in-depth review of a policy. House members historically defer to the decisions of committees.

while senators tend to view committee decisions as recommendations, often seeking additional discussion that could lead to change. 11.5. The Legislative Process Learning Objectives By the end of this section, you will be able to Explain the steps in the classic Bill Becomes Law diagram.

Describe the modern legislative processes that alter the classic process in some way. A dry description of the function of congressional leadership and the many committees and subcommittees in Congress may suggest that the drafting and amending of legislation is a finely tuned process that has become ever more refined over the course of the last few centuries. In reality, however, committees are more likely to kill legislation than to pass it. And the last few decades have seen a dramatic transformation in the way Congress does business.

Creative interpretations of rules and statutes have turned small loopholes into the large gateways through which much Congressional work now gets done. In this section, we will explore both the traditional legislative route by which a bill becomes a law and the modern incarnation of the process. We will also learn how and why the transformation occurred. The Classic Legislative Process The traditional process by which a bill, becomes a law is called the classic legislative process.

First, legislation must be drafted. Theoretically, anyone can do this. Much successful legislation has been initially drafted by someone who is not a member of Congress, such as a think tank or advocacy group or the president. However, Congress is under no obligation to read or introduce this legislation, and only a bill introduced by a member of Congress can hope to become law.

Even the president must rely on legislators to introduce that president's legislative agenda. Technically, bills that raise revenue, like tax bills, must begin in the House. This exception is encoded within the Constitution in Article 1, Section 7, which states, all bills for raising revenue shall originate in the House of Representatives, but the Senate may propose or concur with amendments as on other bills. Yet, despite the seemingly clear language of the Constitution, Congress has found ways to get around this rule.

Once legislation has been proposed, however, the majority leadership consults with the parliamentarian about which committee to send it to. Each chamber has a parliamentarian, an advisor, typically a trained lawyer, who has studied the long and complex rules of the chamber. While Congress typically follows the advice of its parliamentarians, It is not obligated to, and the parliamentarian has no power to enforce their own interpretation of the rules. Once a committee has been selected, the committee chair is empowered to move the bill through the committee process as they see fit.

This occasionally means the chair will refer the bill to one of the committee's subcommittees. Whether at the full committee level or in one of the subcommittees, the next step is typically to hold a hearing on the bill. If the chair decides not to hold a hearing, this is tantamount to killing the bill and committee.

The hearing provides an opportunity for the committee to hear and evaluate expert opinions on the bill or aspects of it. Experts typically include officials from the agency that would be responsible for executing the bill, the bill's sponsors from Congress, and industry lobbyists, interest groups, and academic experts from a variety of relevant fields. Typically, the committee will also accept written statements from the public concerning the bill in question. For many bills, the hearing process can be very routine and straightforward.

Once hearings have been completed, the bill enters the markup stage. This is essentially an amending and voting process. In the end, with or without amendments, the committee or subcommittee will vote. If the committee decides not to advance the bill at that time, it is tabled. Tabling a bill typically means the bill is dead, but there is still an option to bring it back up for a vote again.

If the committee decides to advance the bill, however, it is printed and goes to the chamber, either the House or the Senate. For the sake of example, we will assume that a bill first goes to the House, although the reverse could be true, and in fact bills can move simultaneously through both chambers. Before it reaches the House floor, it must first go through the House Committee on Rules.

This committee establishes the rules of debate, such as time limits and limits on the number and type of amendments. After these rules have been established, the bill moves through the floor, where it is debated and amendments can be added. Once the limits of debate and amendments have been reached, the House holds a vote. If a simple majority, 50% plus 1, votes to advance the bill, it moves out of the House and into the Senate. Once in the Senate, the bill is placed on the calendar so it can be debated.

Or, more typically, the Senate will also consider the bill, or a companion version, in its own committees. Since the Senate is much smaller than the House, it can afford to be much more flexible in its rules for debate. Typically, Senators allow each other to talk and debate as long as the Speaker wants, though they can agree as a body to create time limits.

But without these limits, Debate continues until a motion to table has been offered. and voted on. The flexibility about speaking in the Senate gave rise to a unique tactic, the filibuster. The word filibuster comes from the Dutch word vrebelter, which means pirate.

And the name is appropriate since it was historically the practice that a senator who launches a filibuster virtually hijacks the floor of the chamber by speaking for long periods of time, thus preventing the Senate from closing debate and acting on a bill. The tactic was perfected in the 1850s as Congress wrestled with the complicated issue of slavery. After the Civil War, the use of the filibuster became even more common.

Eventually, in 1917, the Senate passed Rule 22, which allowed the chamber to hold a cloture vote to end debate. To invoke cloture, the Senate had to get a two-thirds majority. This was difficult to do. But it generally did prevent anyone from hijacking the Senate floor, with the salient exception of Senator Strom Thurmond's record 24-hour filibuster of the Civil Rights Act. The classic approach still occasionally occurs, such as when Senator Ted Cruz, Republican from Texas, executed a filibuster in 2013 on legislation related to the Affordable Care Act, which included reading the Dr. Seuss children's classic green eggs and ham.

However, the vast majority of the time, the actual filibuster action is not needed, since floor leaders rarely bring bills to the floor that don't meet the cloture threshold. In 1975, after the heightened partisanship of the civil rights era, the Senate further weakened the filibuster by reducing the number needed for cloture from two-thirds to three-fifths, or 60 votes, where it remains today. except for judicial nominations for which only 51 votes are needed to invoke cloture. Moreover, filibusters are not permitted on the annual Budget Reconciliation Act.

In this way, the Reconciliation Act of 2010 was how the implementing legislation for Obamacare was passed. The budget reconciliation process was also used by Republicans to pass the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, and by Democrats to pass the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, which contained a massive COVID relief package. Because both the House and the Senate can and often do amend bills, the bills that pass out of each chamber frequently look different.

This presents a problem, since the Constitution requires that both chambers pass identical bills. One simple solution is for the first chamber to simply accept the bill that ultimately makes it out. of the second chamber.

Another solution is for the first chamber to further amend the second chamber's bill and send it back to the second chamber. Congress typically takes one of these two options, but about one in every eight bills cannot be resolved in this way. These bills must be sent to a conference committee that negotiates a reconciliation both chambers can accept without amendment.

Only then can the second chamber be resolved. can the bill progress to the president's desk for signature or veto. If the president does veto the bill, both chambers must muster a two-thirds vote to overcome the veto and make the bill law without presidential approval.

Milestone. The noble history of the filibuster? When most people think of the Senate filibuster, they probably picture actor Jimmy Stewart standing exasperated at a podium and demanding the Senate come to its senses and do the right thing.

Even for those not familiar with the classic Frank Capra film, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, the image of a heroic single senator standing up to the power of the entire chamber, while armed only with oratorical skill, naturally tends to inspire. Unfortunately, the history of the filibuster is less heartwarming. This is not to say that noble causes haven't been championed by filibustering senators. They most certainly have, but they have largely been overshadowed by the outright ridiculous and sometimes racist filibusters of the 20th century. In the first category, the 15 and a half hour marathon of Senator Huey Long of Louisiana stands out, hoping to retain the need for Senate confirmation of some jobs he wanted to keep from his political enemies, Long spent much of his filibuster analyzing the Constitution, talking about his favorite recipes, and telling amusing stories, as was his custom.

In a defining moment for the filibuster, Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina spoke for 24 hours and 18 minutes against a weak civil rights bill in 1957. A vocal proponent of segregation and white supremacy, Thurmond had made no secret of his views and had earlier run for the presidency on a segregationist platform. Nor was Thurmond the first to use the filibuster to preserve segregation and prevent the expansion of civil rights for African Americans. Groups of dedicated Southern Senators used the filibuster to prevent the passage of anti-lynching legislation on multiple occasions during the first half of the 20th century.

Later, when faced with the 1964 Civil Rights Act, Southern Senators staged a 57-day filibuster to try and kill it. But the momentum of the nation was against them. The bill passed over their obstructionism and helped to reduce segregation.

Is the filibuster the tool of the noble minority attempting to hold back the tide of a powerful minority? Or does its history as a weapon supporting segregation expose it as merely a tactic of obstruction? Modern legislation is different. For much of the nation's history, the process described above was the standard method by which a bill became a law. Over the course of the last three and a half decades, however, Changes in rules and procedure have created a number of alternate routes.

Collectively, these different routes constitute what some political scientists have described as a new but unorthodox legislative process. According to political scientist Barbara Sinclair, the primary trigger for the shift away from the classic legislative route was the budget reforms of the 1970s. The 1974 Budget and Impoundment Control Act gave Congress a mechanism for making large, all-encompassing budget decisions. In the years that followed, the budget process gradually became the vehicle for creating comprehensive policy changes. One large step in this transformation occurred in 1981, when President Ronald Reagan's administration suggested using the budget to push through his economic reforms.

The benefit of attaching the reforms to the budget resolution was that Congress could force an up-or-down, yay-or-nay vote on the whole package. Such a packaged bill is called an omnibus bill. Creating and voting for an omnibus bill allows Congress to quickly accomplish policy changes that would have taken many votes and the expending of great political capital over a long period of time. This, and successive similar uses of the budget process, convinced many in Congress of the utility of the omnibus bill.

of this strategy. During the contentious and ideologically divided 1990s, the budget process became the common problem-solving mechanism in the legislature, thus laying the groundwork for the way legislation works today. An important characteristic feature of modern legislating is the greatly expanded power and influence of the party leadership over the control of bills.

One reason for this change was the heightened partisanship that stretches back to the 1980s and is still with us today. With such high political stakes, the party leadership is reluctant to simply allow the committees to work things out on their own. In the House, the leadership uses special rules to guide bills through the legislative process and toward a particular outcome.

Uncommon just a few decades ago, these now widely used rules restrict debate and options. and are designed to focus the attention of members. The practice of multiple referrals, with which entire bills or portions of those bills are referred to more than one committee, greatly weakened the different specialization monopolies committees held primarily in the House but also to an extent in the Senate. With less control over the bills, committees naturally reached out to the leadership for assistance.

Indeed, as a testament to its increasing control, The leadership may sometimes avoid committees altogether, preferring to work things out on the floor. And even when bills move through the committees, the leadership often seeks to adjust the legislation before it reaches the floor. Another feature of the modern legislative process exclusively in the Senate is the application of the modern filibuster. Unlike the traditional filibuster, in which a Senate took the floor and held it for as long as possible, the modern filibuster is actually a perversion of the cloture rules adopted to control the filibuster.

When partisanship is high, as it has been frequently, the Senators can request cloture before any bill can get a vote. This has the effect of increasing the number of votes needed for a bill to advance from a simple majority of 51 to a supermajority of 60. The effect is to give the Senate minority great power to obstruct if it is inclined to do so. This has been American Government 3rd Edition, an OpenStax textbook. All OpenStax textbooks are covered under a Creative Commons license and are completely free. For more details, visit OpenStax.org.

The music is Take Me Higher by JazzArt, which is also covered under a Creative Commons license. His website is BetterWithMusic.com. We want to give special thanks to CC Echo. The California Consortium for Equitable Change in Hispanic-Serving Institutions Open Educational Resources for providing the funding for this project.

You can learn more about CC-Echo by visiting hancockcollege.edu slash ccecho. If you would like to contact us, please email audiobook at fastmail.com. Thank you for listening and for sharing this recording with a colleague or friend.