Lingo Quiz Flashcards
Act
Legislation that passed both houses and signed by pres, or override of pres veto.
Also a bill that has been passed by one house and engrossed.
Adjournment sine die
“Adjournment w/o a day”
Adjournment w/o fixing a day for reconvening. Usually connots the final adjournment of a session of Congress.
A session can continue until Jan. 3 the following year when under the 20th amendment it automatically terminates.
Both houses must agree to a concurrent resolution for a house to adjourn for > 3 days.
Amendment in the nature of a substitute
An amendment replaces the entire text of a bill.
Does so by striking out everything after the enactment clause and inserts a new version.
Appeal
A members challenge of a ruling or decision made by the presiding officer.
In the S the senator appeals to members of the chambers to override the decision. If carried by a majority the appeal nullifies the chair’s ruling.
In the house, the decision of the Speaker is final. Essentially appeals don’t happen here.
Apprpriations bill
Leg that provides legal authority to obligate and spend money from the Treasury.
The Con requires that money drawn from the Treasury must be, “in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.”
Can be one of three types:
- )Annual also called regular or general
- ) Supplemental
- ) Continuing, often called a CR.
H and S rules place a number of restrictions on consideration of appropriations bills in an effort to separate funding decisions from the creation of new policies.
Authorization bill
Leg that establishes or continues the legal operation of a federal program or agency.
Can be indefinite or for a set period of time.
Can be limits on budget, or may authorize “ such sums as may be necessary.”
H and S rules prohibit appropriations for a program or agency not authorized in law.
Budget authority
Authority to enter into obligations that will result in future outlays involving federal funds.
The basic forms of budget authority are: appropriations, contract authority, and borrowing authority.
Budget authority may be classified by
- the period of availability (one years, 5 years, unlimited)
- timing of congressional action (current or permanent)
- manner of determining the amount available (definite or indefinite)
i.e. putting money into a checking account.
Then agency writes check (obligated)
Then it is cashed (outlays)
Budget outlays
Money spent in a given fiscal year as opposed to money appropriated for that year. (cashing the check)
One year’s budget authority can result in outlays over several years, and the outlays in any given year result from a mix of budget authority for that year and previous.
Calendars
Agendas or lists of business awaiting action by each chamber.
House has 4 Discharge- House- Private- Union-
In S all leg matters reported from committee go on one calendar. They are listed in the order in which committees report them, or when the S places them on the calendar. But may be called up out of order by majority leader, by unanimous consent of S or by a motion to call up a bill.
The S uses on nonleg calendar that is devoted to treaties and nominations.
Calendar Wednesday
In H, only committee chairs or authorized committee members may invoke a Cal. Wed. procedure.
Under this procedure, any bill from either the H calendar or Union calendar, except priveleged bills may be called up.
General debate is limited to 2 hours. bills from union calendar are considered by committee of the whole.
Rarely used.
Clean bill
After a committee has finished major revision to a bill they reassemble changes into a new measure.
This revised measure is referred back to the committee which then reports it back to the floor.
Tactical for 2 reasons:
- time saver- committee recommended changes are not subject to consideration and vote by the chamber.
- Protects committee amendments that might be subject to points of order on germaneness.
Cloture
The formal procedure by which a fillbuster can be ended in the S.
A motion for cloture can apply to any measure before the S, including a proposal to change the chamber’s rules.
The signatures of 16 S’s are needed for intro of a cloture motion, and to end a fillibuster the cloture motion must be approved by 3/5 of the entire S membership. (2/3 of those present needed to amend standing rules of the S)
The cloture request is put to a roll call vote 1 hour after the S meets on the second day after intro of the motion. If approved, the bill or amendment in question comes to a final vote after 30 hours of consideration
Committee of the Whole
All members of the house sitting as a committee.
Quorum = 100
Any leg must have passed through the regular legislative committee or appropriations committee and must have been placed on the calendar.
Technically bills must deal with money.
When the whole house resolves itself into the comm of the whole it supplants the speaker w/ a chair. It then debates and votes on measures and amendments.
When committee completes its work on a measure, it dissolves by rising. The speaker returns and the chair of the comm of the whole reports to the speaker.
Then members may demand a roll call vote on any first-degree amendment adopted by the comm of the whole.
Concurrent Resolution
H. Con. Res or S. Con. Res must be adopted by both houses, but isn’t sent to pres.
No force of law.
Used to fix the time of adjournment. Also used to express opinion on foreign policy and domestic issues.
Allows coordinated decisions on the federal budget under the 1974 Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act.
Conference
Meeting between representatives of the H and S to reconcile difference when the chambers pass different versions of the same bill.
Speaker appoints managers of the conference committee.
Senate presiding officer appoints conferees.
A majority of the managers for each house must reach agreement on the provisions.
Then a conference report goes to the floor for up and down vote w/o amendments.
If it doesn’t pass then, it goes back to conference or a new conference can be convened.
Bills with minor differences often have their differences resolved w/o formal conference
Congressional Record
verbatim account.
4 parts:
- H proceedings
- S proceedings
- Extension of remarks –> extraneous materials submitted to recognize constituents, etc.
- Daily Digest –> summary of floor acitons
Continuing Resolution
Leg, typically a joint resolution, that continues appropriations for ongoing activities of the government.. Usually specifies a max rate at which the agency may incur obligations. Usually the base rate from the previous year, the pres’s budget request, or an appopriations bill that year passed by either or both houses but not cleared.
Discharge a committeee
H more often than S
Attempt to relieve a committee from a consideration of a measure before it.
Seldom successful.
Discharge Calendar
The House Calendar to which motions to discharge committees are referred when they have the required number of signatures (218) and are awaiting floor action.
Discharge resolutions
In the S, special motions that any S may introduce to relieve a committee from consideration of a bill before it.
Rarely used.
Earmark
in H rules - means a provision or report language included primarily at the request of a member providing, authorizing, or recommending a specific benefit for a target state/district. Also can be done through changes in formula driven processes or competitive award processes.
Enacting clause
Key phrase in bills beginning, “Be it enacted by the S and H of R…”
Important because a successful motion to strike it from the legislation kills the measure.