Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher. Congress Bicameralism Enumerated powers Was primary branch...

22
Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher

Transcript of Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher. Congress Bicameralism Enumerated powers Was primary branch...

Presentation by Dr. Kevin Lasher

Congress

• Bicameralism

• Enumerated powers

• Was primary branch

• Representative democracy

Organization of Congress

HOUSE• 435 Members (7 for SC)

• Two year terms

• Individual districts

SENATE• 100 Members (2 SC)

• Six year terms (staggered terms)

• State-wide districts

• More prestigious body

Organization of Congress

111th Congress (2009-2010)

House 255 Democrats

179 Republicans

1 Vacant

Senate 57 Democrats

41 Republicans

2 Independent (Democrats)

Organization of Congress

112th Congress (2011-2012)

House 241 Republicans

192 Democrats

2 Vacant

Senate 51 Democrats

47 Republicans

2 Independent (Democrats)

Organization of Congress

113th Congress (2013-2014)

House 234 Republicans

201 Democrats

Senate 53 Democrats

45 Republicans

2 Independents (Democrats)

Organization of Congress

114th Congress (2015-2016)

House 244 Republicans

188 Democrats

3 Vacant

Senate 54 Republican

44 Democrats

2 Independents (Democrats)

The Average CongressMAN

• Male

• Age 50+

• 95% College degree; 50% have law degrees

• Church Goer

• Prior Political Experience

• Fairly wealthy; 50% are “millionaires”

Diversity of Congress 113th

CongressHouse Senate %Congress %Country

Women79 20 19% 51%

African Americans

42 2 8% 13%

HispanicsAmericans

33 4 7% 14%

Asian Americans

12 1 2% 4%

Incumbency

• Sitting members of Congress have tremendous advantages in running for re-election

• Fund-raising, name recognition, media attention, constituency service

Incumbency

Incumbency

2010 – 85% 2012 – 90%

Incumbency

2010 – 84% 2012 – 91%

Incumbency

I hate Congress, but my Congressman is doing a good job

Major Functions of Congress

• Representation

• Constituency Service

• Policy-making and law-making

• Oversight

• Running for re-election

Representation: Theories

• Congressman as Delegate (Robot)Representative /Senator simply votes according

to wishes of his constituents; reflects “majority will”

Problems: uninformed constituents, lack of clear message from voters, 49% unhappy

Representation: Theories

• Congressman as TrusteeRepresentative /Senator is intelligent and

serious; we “trust” them to make good decisions; we can replace them if they disappoint us

Problems: High incumbency return rates suggest that we rarely replace our congressmen

Representation: Theories

• Both theories have problems

What Really Affects a Congressman’s Vote?

• Party ID/Ideology

• Staffers

• Colleagues

• Lobbyists

• President as Lobbyist

• Constituents

Constituency Service

• Bringing “pork” to district/state

• Assisting constituents with Washington “red tape”

• Meeting/communicating with constituents

• Publicizing achievements

Taking care of the people back home

Constituency Service

• This is a major reason why individual congressman are quite popular while Congress as a whole is rather unpopular

• Is this changing in 2014?

Major Functions of Congress

• Representation

• Constituency Service

• Policy-making and law-making

• Oversight

• Running for re-election