representation in congress ryan d. williamson 17 february 2015

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REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

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Page 1: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESSRyan D. Williamson

17 February 2015

Page 2: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Agenda

• Attendance• Return Exam One• Midterm Evaluations• Lecture on Congress• Reading for Thursday

Page 3: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Questions?

Page 4: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
Page 5: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Objective

• Debate how members of Congress can best represent constituents.

Page 6: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Constitutional Prerogatives: Powers of Congress

• Designed to be the most powerful branch • Primary lawmaking body • Article 1, Section 8, lists enumerated (or expressed) powers

• Also lists the necessary and proper (or “elastic”) clause, where the broadest power is found

Page 7: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Constitutional Prerogatives: Structure

• Representation through a bicameral legislature• Comprised of the House and Senate• Connecticut Compromise between large and small

states

• Compare and contrast the House and the Senate Principal-agent problem: public representation

Page 8: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Causes of Individualism in Congress: Plurality & SMD• Elections for the House and Senate use single- member districts (SMD) and plurality rule

• In single-member districts, each district/state chooses one representative

• Plurality means that whoever receives the most votes wins

Page 9: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Causes of Individualism in Congress: Primaries

• Candidates for office used to be determined by political parties

• Primaries started as a way to nominate candidates in the early 20th century

• Primaries allow voters to choose who will appear under the party label on the general-election ballot

Page 10: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Causes of Individualism in Congress: Redistricting

• The number of districts in each state is based on population, with each state getting at least one

• The total number of districts has been fixed at 435 since 1911

• Most states redraw district lines every ten years even if they don’t lose or gain seats

Page 11: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Redistricting and “One Person, One Vote”

• Supreme Court put restrictions on the drawing of districts in the 1960s • Baker v. Carr (1962)• Wesberry v. Sanders (1964)• Reynolds v. Sims (1964)

• Districts must adhere to “one person, one vote” standard

• Forced states to draw districts with equal populations

Page 12: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Baker v. Carr

• Prior to the 1960s, the state of Tennessee had failed to redraw districts lines since 1901 despite mandates dictating that they do so after each census.

• Over those decades, the population shifted in such a way that Shelby County had 10 times as many residents as some other districts.

• Baker then argued that this inhibited him from receiving equal treatment under the law because his vote was weighted much less.

• The Supreme Court then ruled in his favor.

Page 13: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Wesberry v. Sanders

• Wesberry, a member of Georgia’s fifth congressional district, sued the governor over the distribution of voters in the state.

• Because his district had between 2 and 3 times more voters, he argued that he and other voters in his district were being discriminated against.

• The Supreme Court then ruled in his favor.

Page 14: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Reynolds v. Sims

• In the Alabama state legislature, state senators represented grossly different sized populations. One senator represented 41 times more people than another.

• Voters in Jefferson County brought suit against the state arguing that this violated the equal protection clause.

• The Supreme Court ruled in their favor, arguing that districts need to be as close to “one person, one vote” as possible.

Page 15: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Gerrymandering

• Politics easily intrudes into the drawing of districts

• By redistricting, states can manipulate representation

• Districts are frequently drawn in strange shapes to gain political advantage

Page 16: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Illinois 4th

Page 17: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Maryland 3rd

Page 18: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

North Carolina 12th

Page 19: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Pennsylvania 7th

Page 20: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Florida 5th

Page 21: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Redistricting and Minority Representation

• Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the election of more minority candidates

• Also a rise in the number of women elected, but Congress still does not demographically mirror the nation as a whole

Page 22: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
Page 23: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
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Partisan and Racial Redistricting

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What is the Best Type of Representation?

• How does a member determine how best to represent her constituents?

• Edmund Burke proposed that sometimes members act like trustees and other times like delegates

• Most members try to balance these visions of representation

Page 27: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

The Incumbency Advantage

• Members of Congress are reelected in very high numbers

• What causes this advantage? • Gerrymandering• Pork• Television access • Campaign finance• National party efforts

Page 28: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Questions?

Page 29: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

STRUCTURE AND PROCESSES

Page 30: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Agenda• Attendance• Announcements

• Quiz 2 next Thursday• Pick up your test after class if you didn’t get it Tuesday

• Discuss midterm evaluations• Lecture on congress• Reading for next week

Page 31: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Questions?

Page 32: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Averages

Difficulty: 6.0

Workload: 5.3

Interest: 4.9

Presentation: 6.9

Class overall: 7.1

Instructor overall: 8.4

Page 33: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Difficulty• http://www.wwnorton.com/college/polisci/americanpolitical

systemcore/welcome.aspx• [email protected]• Tuesday & Thursday 2-3pm, by appointment

Page 34: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Difficulty• Emphasize the more important aspects• Use more “real world” examples• Don’t lecture so quickly• Get away from pure lecture

Page 35: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
Page 36: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Objective

• Identify the structure and composition of Congress

• Describe how a bill becomes a law

Page 37: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Internal Institutions of Congress and Unstable Coalitions • Institutions and procedures of Congress are designed to grant agenda control to a subset of people

• Agenda control helps overcome unstable coalition problems and prevent chaos

Page 38: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Party Leaders

• Party leaders solve coordination and unstable coalition problems by enforcing party discipline

• Reed’s Rules provide procedural guidelines for party leaders

• Party leaders are elected at the beginning of a • Congress by the members of each party:

• Speaker of the House• Majority/Minority Leader• Majority/Minority Whip

Page 39: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
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Committees

• Much of the detailed legislative work in Congress occurs in committees

• Each committee focuses on a particular area of policy (jurisdiction)

• Allows for specialization and expertise in committees—so better public policy

• Also allows self-selection for members, who may craft legislation, find district benefits, or rise in prestige

Page 42: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Types of Committees

• Standing committees • Exist permanently

• Special/select committees • Formed for a specific purpose

• Joint committees• Members of House and Senate, no legislative authority

• Conference committees • Members of House and Senate for resolving differences

over a bill

Page 43: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
Page 44: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Committee Membership

• Determining committee assignments is a highly political process

• Party leaders determine committee assignments, and therefore more loyal members are rewarded

• Chairs of committees and chairs of subcommittees are powerful

• Agenda setters: Help to resolve unstable coalition issues

Page 45: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Other Internal Features

• Caucuses, staff, and research services also play a role in Congress

• Caucuses are a way for members to group themselves for business

• CBO and CRS provide independent information for members

Page 46: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

The Legislative Process I• Bill proposals: only legislators can introduce bills • Bills referred to proper committee based on jurisdiction

and party goals • Committee action

• Most bills not acted on in committee • Committees may mark up bills for the floor

• House uses special rules to bring bills to the floor • Open rules, closed rules, and restricted rules

• Senate uses unanimous consent agreements to bring bills to floor• this empowers individuals

Page 47: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

The Legislative Process II• Floor action can be exciting, though typically well- scripted • Little debate, chambers almost empty • Roll calls in both chambers • Resolving differences between House and Senate bills • Enrolled bills sent to president

• Sign, veto, pocket veto

• House and Senate can override veto with 2/3 vote of each chamber

• Separation of powers system creates bias against action (“institutional friction”)

Page 48: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015
Page 49: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Senate Distinctiveness

• Unlimited debate is allowed • Filibuster • Cloture

• Committees less powerful • No germaneness rule

• Parties less powerful • Individual rights trump collective action in Senate

Page 50: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

Questions?

Page 51: REPRESENTATION IN CONGRESS Ryan D. Williamson 17 February 2015

For next time…

• Read chapter 5 of Bullock and Gaddie