|
GOVERNMENT 101: Congress
Major Differences
Between the Two Houses of Congress:
|
HOUSE
|
SENATE
|
|
435 members
serving two-year terms
|
100 members
serving rotating six-year terms
|
|
Speaker's
referral of bills to committee is hard to challenge.
|
Referral
decisions easy to challenge.
|
|
Committees
almost always consider legislation first.
|
Committee
consideration easily bypassed.
|
|
Rules Committee
powerful; controls time of debate, admissibility of amendments.
|
Rules Committee
weak; few limits on debate or amendments.
|
|
Debate usually
limited to one hour.
|
Unlimited
debate unless shortened by unanimous consent or by invoking cloture.
|
|
Non-germane
amendments may not be introduced from floor.
|
Non-germane
amendments may be introduced (riders).
|
Qualifications for
Entering Congress:
House:
- Must be
25 years of age (when seated, not when elected).
- Must have
been a citizen of the United States for 7 years.
- Must be
an inhabitant of the state from which elected.
(NOTE: custom, but not the Constitution, requires that a representative
live in the district that he or she represents.)
Senate:
- Must be
30 years of age (when seated, not when elected).
- Must have
been a citizen of the United States for 9 years.
- Must be
an inhabitant of the state from which elected.
Other Sources of Information:
Capitol Questions
Answers visitors' questions about Congress. Online from C-SPAN.
Congress
of the United States An introductory article about the U.S. Congress.
Online from Grolier's Online.
CongressLink
Historical information about Congress, explanations
of basic congressional procedures, and selections written by scholars
and subject matter experts. Online from CongressLink.
In
Congress Assembled: Continuity and Change in the Governing of the United
States A teaching unit on the Constitution, Congress, and current
events using documents from THOMAS and the Documents of the Continental
Congress and the Constitutional Convention, an American Memory collection
at the National Digital Library of the Library of Congress. Online from
the Learning Page of the Library of Congress.
Glossary
of Senate Terms Defines terms used in the Senate and the legislative
process. Online from the U.S. Senate Web Site.
A Map of Capitol
Hill Online from the U.S. House of Representatives.
108th
Congressional Pictorial Directory The 104th, 105th,
106th and
107th
Congressional Pictorial Directories are also available. Online from the
Government Printing Office.
Temple
of Liberty: Building the Capitol for a New Nation Online from the
Library of Congress.
The United States Capitol
Home Page Online from the Architect of the Capitol.
A Virtual
Tour of the United States Capitol Online from the U.S. Senate.
Congressional Leadership
I. Senate
|
PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE
|
Selected by majority party.
Usually most senior member of the Senate majority party.
|
|
Majority Leader
|
Leads the party.
|
|
Majority Whip
|
Assists the leader, rounds up
votes, heads group of deputy whips.
|
|
Chairman of the Conference
|
Presides over meetings of all
members of the Senate majority party.
|
|
Policy Committee
|
Schedules legislation.
|
|
Legislative Review Committee
|
Reviews legislative proposals
and makes recommendations to senators of the majority party.
|
|
Steering Committee
|
Assigns Senators of the majority
party to committees.
|
|
Republican/Democratic
Senatorial Campaign Committee
|
Provides funds, assistance to
Republican/Democratic candidates for the Senate.
|
|
|
|
|
Minority Leader
|
Leads the party.
|
|
Assistant Minority Leader
|
Assists the leader, rounds up
votes.
|
|
Chairman of the Conference
|
Presides over meetings of all
senators of the minority party.
|
|
Policy Committee
|
Makes recommendations on party
policy.
|
|
Committee on Committees
|
Assigns Senators of the minority
party to committees.
|
II. House
|
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE
|
Selected by the majority
party.
|
|
Majority Leader
|
Leads the party.
|
|
Majority Whip
|
Assists the leader, rounds up
votes, heads large group of deputy and assistant whips.
|
|
Chairman of the Caucus
|
Presides over meetings of all
members of the majority party.
|
|
Steering and Policy Committee
|
Schedules legislation, assigns
members of the majority party to committees.
|
|
Republican/Democratic Congressional
Campaign Committee
|
Provides funds, advice to Republican/Democratic
candidates for the House.
|
|
|
|
|
Minority Leader
|
Leads the party.
|
|
Minority Whip
|
Assists the leader, rounds up
votes, heads large forum of deputy and assistant whips.
|
|
Chairman of the Conference
|
Presides over meetings of all
members of the minority party.
|
|
Committee on Committees
|
Assigns members of the minority
party to committees.
|
|
Policy Committee
|
Advises on party policy.
|
|
Research Committee
|
On request, provides information
about issues.
|
The Powers of Congress
The powers
of Congress are found in Article
1, section 8, of the Constitution.
The following is a brief summary:
|
To levy and
collect taxes, duties, imposts, and excises.
|
|
To borrow
money.
|
|
To regulate
commerce with foreign nations, among the states, and with Indian
tribes.
|
|
To establish
rules for naturalization (that is, becoming a citizen) and bankruptcy.
|
|
To coin money,
set its value, and punish counterfeiting.
|
|
To fix the
standard of weights and measures.
|
|
To establish
a post office and post roads.
|
|
To issue
patents and copyrights to inventors and authors.
|
|
To create
courts inferior to (that is, below) the Supreme Court.
|
|
To define
and punish piracies, felonies on the high seas, and crimes against
the law of nations.
|
|
To declare
war.
|
|
To raise
and support an army and navy and make rules for their governance.
|
|
To provide
for a militia (reserving to the states the right to appoint militia
officers and to train the militia under congressional rule).
|
|
To exercise
exclusive legislative powers over the seat of government (that
is, the District of Columbia) and over places purchased to be
federal facilities (forts, arsenals, dockyards, and "other
needful buildings.")
|
|
To "make
all laws which shall be necessary and proper for the carrying
into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested
by this Constitution in the government of the United States."
|
|