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Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.
Page 2: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

Chapter Focus

Section 1 Congressional Membership

Section 2 The House of Representatives

Section 3 The Senate

Section 4 Congressional Committees

Section 5 Staff and Support Agencies

Chapter Assessment

Page 4: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

The House of Representatives

Key Terms

Constituents

Caucus

Majority leader

Whips

Billcalendars, quorum

Objectives• Describe the rules and procedures used in the

House and explain its role in the lawmaking process

Page 6: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

A. Each house of Congress has rules to help members conduct business.

I. Rules for Lawmaking (pages 132–134)

B. Congress carries out most of its work by committees. Because of its large membership, committee work is even more important in the House than in the Senate.

C. Party membership guides Congress in its work, since the majority party in each house organizes the committees, appoints committee heads, and controls the flow of legislation.

Majority Party- Majority Party- the political party with the most people in office. Example: Today Republicans hold the majority

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Do you agree or disagree with the House rule that limits a representative’s speaking time during a debate? Explain.

I. Rules for Lawmaking (pages 132–134)

Page 9: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

A. The Speaker of the House is leader of the majority party and has great power and influence over its members.

II. House Leadership (pages 134–135)

B. Floor leaders of both the majority and minority parties are party leaders who help steer bills through committees.

C. Party whips assist the floor leaders in persuading party members to support laws the party favors.

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II. House Leadership (pages 134–135)

The Speaker of the House follows the vice president in the line of presidential succession. Do you support or object to this plan? Explain.

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A. Members attend House floor sessions to vote on legislation.

III. Lawmaking in the House (pages 135–137)

B. All laws begin as bills introduced in the House, then go to committee. If approved there, they are put on the proper calendar, listing the order in which they will be considered on the House floor.

C. The House Rules Committee receives all bills approved by the various committees of the House.

Page 12: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

A. Characteristics of Senate Members include: at least 30 years old, citizenship in U.S for 7 years and they must live in the state they represent..

B. Senators serve for longer terms because the government would like to see more continuality within the Senate.

VI.Membership of the Senate (pages 135–137)

C. The Rules Committee determines which bills will be considered by the full House and places them on the House Calendar.

D. The Rules Committee also settles disputes among other House committees and delays or blocks bills that representatives and House leaders do not want to come to a vote.

E. When the Rules Committee sends bills to the floor, the House may sit as a Committee of the Whole, in which 100 members constitutes a quorum, in order to speed up consideration of an important bill, so that the full House can then vote on it.

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D. The Rules Committee determines which bills will be considered by the full House and places them on the House Calendar.

E. The Rules Committee also settles disputes among other House committees and delays or blocks bills that representatives and House leaders do not want to come to a vote.

F. When the Rules Committee sends bills to the floor, the House may sit as a Committee of the Whole, in which 100 members constitutes a quorum, in order to speed up consideration of an important bill, so that the full House can then vote on it.

III. Lawmaking in the House (pages 135–137)

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III. Lawmaking in the House (pages 135–137)

Why is so much of the work of Congress done in committees?

Committees divide up the tasks and make them manageable.

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III. Lawmaking in the House (pages 135–137)

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1. Main Idea In a graphic organizer similar to the one below, show three ways in which the Rules Committee controls legislation.

Checking for Understanding

Page 17: Splash Screen Contents Chapter Focus Section 1Section 1Congressional Membership Section 2Section 2The House of Representatives Section 3Section 3The.

___ constituents

___ caucus

___ bill

___ majority leader

___ whips

___ quorum

A. a private meeting of party leaders to choose candidates for office

B. the Speaker’s top assistant

C. an assistant to the party floor leader in the legislature

D. a person whom a member of Congress has been elected to represent

E. a proposed law

F. the minimum number of members who must be present to permit a legislative body to take official action

Checking for UnderstandingMatch the term with the correct definition.

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5. How does a representative introduce a bill in the House?

Checking for Understanding

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