Civics Unit 2.2 (ch. 6.4) Congress and Lawmaking.

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Civics Unit 2.2 (ch. 6.4) Congress and Lawmaking

Transcript of Civics Unit 2.2 (ch. 6.4) Congress and Lawmaking.

Civics Unit 2.2 (ch. 6.4)

Congress and Lawmaking

Pair Share• Please answer1. What is the difference b/w a

standing committee & a conference committee? What determines a House or Senate member’s committee assignment?

2. What is the difference b/w a public and a private bill?

3. How is a joint resolution like a bill?4. What is a filibuster?

I. Working Together in LawmakingA. Debate Clause- Art I Sec 6-

Gives members of Congress immunity from lawsuits for statements made in legislative chambers

B. Compromise- blending and adjusting competing views and interests to accomplish something

C. Consensus- agreement between groups

D. Negotiation- meet and talk with others to create compromise or agreement

II. Congressional OrganizationA. Congressional

committees- groups that focus on specific issues for oversight and management1. standing

committees- permanent committees

2. select committees- temporary committees with specific issue (usually just to investigate) -9/11 Commission

3. joint committees- have members of both houses4. subcommittees- smaller groups within

committees

-Veterans' Affairs, -Armed Services-Energy and Natural Resources-Health, Education,Labor, and Pensions-Select Committee on Intelligence

-Armed Services -Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions-Small Business and Entrepreneurship

B. Committee Assignments1. Seniority system- senators and reps who

have been in longest get preferred committee spots

2. Party in power controls chairmanship

III. How a Bill Becomes a Law

A. Types of Bills Passed1. Private Bills- individual people or places2. Public Bills- apply to entire nation and

involve general matters (ex: taxation, Medicare)1. Most bills are public bills

$116 Billion for Katrina reliefHR 3200- America's Affordable Health Choices Act

3. Resolutions- formal approved statements on lawmakers opinions or decisionsa. Joint Resolution- passed by both houses and

law if signed by President (same as a bill)b. Non-binding Resolutions - are not law but

just say lawmakers opinions

What do you think the artist is saying about lawmaking?

B. Step 1- Introducing1. Can start in either Senate or House 2. ONLY a Senator or a Representative

introduce a bill for Congress to consider

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tyeJ55o3El0School House Rock -I’m just a bill –video

C. Step 2- Committee Action1. Proposed bill is sent to appropriate

committee2. Committee can:

a. Pass bill as isb. Pass bill w/changesc. Replace w/new billd. Ignore bill to die (“pigeonholing”)e. Kill bill w/majority vote

D. Step 3- Debating 1. Bills passed in committee are debated by

the whole House or Senate2. Rules of Debate- House of

Representatives sets rules, usually time limits

3. Filibuster- talking a bill to deatha. Only in the Senate, no time limit for speakingb. Senator can delay vote by speaking for hours

until the bill’s sponsor withdraws itc. Vote for cloture- end filibuster with 3/5 vote

(most bills must pass with 60 votes) Rand Paul Filabuster http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4MwjvOxSgic

E. Step 4- Voting1. All members vote (in whichever house

the bill began in)1. Yea (yes)2. Nay (no)3. Present (very few do this)

F. Step 5- Sent to Other House1. If bill passed in one house, it is sent to the

other for approval2. Senate and House must pass identical bills3. If disagreement, a conference

committee from both houses meets to work out differences

G. Step 6- Signing 1. President can sign the bill into law2. President can veto –reject the bill

1. (Congress can override a veto with 2/3 but this is rare)

3. President can do nothinga. If Congress is in session, bill passesb. If not, it is pocket vetoed