Exam 2 Flashcards
What is incumbency?
holding the political office for which one is running
Steps to how a bill becomes a law
1) a bill is introduced
2) Goes to a committee action
3) reaches the house or the senate
4) reaches conference action
5) executive action
pork-barrel spending
spending that benefits a legislator’s constituency
constituency
People residing within the geographical area represented by an elected official
open-seat election
election in which there is no incumbent in the race
redistricting
the process of altering districts to make them as equal in population as possible
reapportionment
the reallocation of U.S. House seats among states after each census as a result of population changes
gerrymandering
political party in power draws legislative districts to make it easier for its candidates to win elections
midterm election
congressional elections that occur in non-presidential election years
party leaders
members of the U.S. House and Senate elected by their respective party caucuses to represent their caucuses
party caucus
members of a political party in Congress that elect its party’s leadership, set policy goals and plan strategy
standing committees
permanent congressional committees with responsibility for a particular public policy area
conference committees
temporary committees formed to bargain over the differences in the U.S. House and Senate versions of a bill before the bill can go to the president
seniority
a member of Congress’ consecutive years of service on a particular committee
bill
a proposed law