A | B |
bicameral | two houses |
constituent | person in a legislative district |
district we live in | district 7 |
number of districts in VA | 11 districts |
franking priviledge | sending job related mail w/o paying postage |
recess | when congress is not in session |
interest group | people with similar viewpoints who work together for that cause |
bill | a proposed law |
census | taken every 10 years to determine the population |
censure | formal disapproval of a Congressman |
expulsion | removing a Congressman from office |
immunity | benefit of congress, can't get in trouble |
president pro-tempore | in charge of day-to-day business in the Senate |
speaker of the house | leader of the house of rep & delegates |
party whips | assistants in the house and senate, keep track of how members vote |
majority leader | leader of the majority party in the house and senate |
minority leader | leader of the minority party in the house and senate |
president of the senate | VP of the US , head of the Senate |
lobbyists | persuade govt officials to support goals of interest groups |
general assembly | the VA legislative branch |
delegate | a member of the General Assembly |
gerrymandering | drawing political boundaries based on an areas political beliefs |
session | when Congress meets |
seniority system | congressmen that have served the longest get the best committee assignments |
appropriations | bill dealing with money |
standing committee | committees that exists all the time (agriculture, energy) |
select committee | committees for temporary issues |
conference committee | members of the house and senate that work out the details of a bill |
expressed powers | stated specifcally in the Consitution |
implied powers | not stated in the Constitution, they are suggested by the "elastic clause" |
impeach | process of formally accusing the president or Supreme Court justice of a wrongdoing |
2 presidents that have been impeached | Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton |
pocket veto | an indirect veto by the President |
filibuster | a tactic for defeating a bill in the Senate (talking) |
cloture | ending a debate in Congress |
quorum | number of Congressmen needed to have a meeting be valid |
pigeonhole | when a bill is set aside in a committee and never looked at |
voice vote | voting by saying "yea" or "nea" |
roll call vote | each person announces his vote |
precedent | an act that may be used as an example |