Unit 3: Structure and Functions of the Federal Government Three branches compose the basic structure of the federal government. Public policy is created.

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Unit 3: Structure and Functions of the Federal GovernmentThree branches compose the basic structure of the

federal government. Public policy is created through the making of laws, the execution of the laws and the adjudication of disputes under the laws.

Content Statements

Law and public policy are created and implemented by three branches of government; each functions with its own set of powers and responsibilities.

The political process creates a dynamic interaction among the three branches of government in addressing current issues.

The Legislative Branch

Section 6: How a Bill Becomes a Law

6 Steps• Referral to Committee

– Most cases, a bill introduced in Congress is referred to a committee– Committee consideration is crucial– Without committee approval, bills usually don’t go to full House or Senate

• • Hearings

– Committee and subcommittee hearings—open to public– Supporters and opponents testify– Interest groups testify

• • Markup

– Usually take place at the full committee level– Markup is the exact phrasing—line by line– Time consuming and precise– Lot of detail– Now, bill must get full committee support

6 Steps• Floor Consideration

– Full House and Senate debates– Changes can be made to bill– Filibuster—one or more senators can hold up the final vote on a bill through delaying

tactics– Voting—after floor debate, congress members vote on the bill– Roll-call vote—each member called individually to declare vote

• • Conference Committee

– A bill that passes one house of Congress is then sent to the other house– Members from both houses– Iron out last details

• • Presidential Action

– Sign bill, making it a law– Veto the bill– Keep the bill 10 days without signing it—bill then becomes a law– Pocket veto—president gets bill within 10 days of Congress adjournment—does not sign

and bill does not become a law

Website

• How a Bill Becomes a Law and terms

• Schoolhouse Rock--How a Bill Becomes a Law

The Legislative Branch

Section 7: Congress and Special Interest Groups

Influence of Special Interests

– Argument: Congress serves special interests at the expense of the public good

– Give too much weight to the narrow concerns of interest groups of their home districts and states

– Pork-barrel spending—awards projects and grants, or “pork” from the gov “barrel” to a member’s home district or state• $500,000 to renovate the boyhood farm of Lawrence Welk• $320,000 to buy the home of President William McKinley’s in-

laws in Canton, OH for donation to the state as a museum• $10 million to build a ramp to Milwaukee’s County Stadium

parking lot

More Pork Barrel Spending Examples

http://www.areddy.net/mscott/pork.html

Great example of wasted spending—PIZZA MACHINE

http://cssrc.us/publications.aspx?id=6280#.UMeKKCaqaGk.email

Voice of the People

• Despite problems, Congress provides citizens with a voice in gov

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