Congress Flashcards
Single-member, simple plurality elections
a single person is elected per district and the candidate with the most votes wins
Proportional representation
not used in the US but candidate wins 30% of votes get 30% of seats
Primary Elections
decides who is on the ballot for a party
Trustee vs. Delegate Models of Representation
Trustee: constitues elect trustees based off trust that they will do as they wish but they have full autonomy
Delegate: These delegates act only as a mouthpiece for the wishes of their constituency, and have no autonomy from the constituency.
Substantive Representation
electing people who vote the same way as you
Descriptive Representation
electing people who look the same way as you (gender, race, occupation, place of origin)
Incumbency advantage
incumbents usually win through credit claiming, position taking, name recognition
legislation
actually laws which congress is to pass
Gerrymandering
drawing strangely shaped districts for a political advantage
Speaker of the House
2nd in line for the president
Committee Jurisdiction
specific committees make specific types of laws
Seniority
the concept that a person takes precedent over the other due to their age or experience
Filibuster and Cloture
Filibuster: hold the floor by talking
Cloture: a procedure for ending a debate and taking a vote.
Closed vs. Open rule
open: amendments may be offered by any members in the house, closed; no amendments may be made
Veto and Veto Override
president can veto any bill, senate and house can override with a 2/3 majority
Party Discipline
pressuring party members to vote one way
Congressional Polarization
cases where a member of congress’s individual opinion on something differs from that of their party
Gridlock
when nothing is being passed in congress
Logrolling
2 members supporting each others bills
“advise and consent”
presidential nominations for executive and judicial posts take effect only when confirmed by the Senate
Impeachment
the process by which a legislative body formally levels charges against a high official of government—– for treason, bribery or high crimes
Conference Committee
both chamber committee specific to a bill
Caucuses
groups of people coming together for a specific issue or interest
Credit Claiming
when a member of congress claims responsibility for unilaterally making something happen