Delegated powers require both houses of Congress to work with each other. These powers are the powers to:
to tax
borrow money
regulate commerce
raise an army
create and make rules for federal courts
establish naturalization laws
establish post offices
provide a militia
make laws necessary and proper to carry out ๐these powers
Congress also has the power of the purse which gives the Congress to influence the president or bureaucracy by withholding or putting conditions on funding. The power of the purse can be used to promote specific programs or lessen the power of an agency and the power of the purse has been used by Congress to limit executive power.
The House of Representatives can only initiate tax laws and spending bills. Thus, the House Ways and Means Committee oversees taxing and spending legislation. The Senate can only amend revenue bills.
Some of the Senateโs unique powers include confirming president nominations to federal courts or ambassadorships to foreign countries, confirming members of the presidentโs cabinet, and ratifying treaties signed by the president.
Congressional actions do have restrictions meaning that Congress canโt pass bills of attainder or ex post facto laws, levy export taxes, or grant titles of nobility.
Congress performs oversight through committees and subcommittees to review the work of executive agencies which provides a check on the executive branch. Congress investigates corruption and waste and also calls on experts and citizens to testify at hearings to discuss the governmentโs problems and provide solutions. All of the committee chairs have the power to legally compel witnesses to appear and testify.
Committee hearings and floor debate help to increase the publicโs knowledge of the government and societal issues. Floor debates can garner national attention because of issues like gun control, tax cuts, Social Security reform, healthcare reform, and sending armed troops abroad.
The legislative process is slow by design which prevents Congress from acting hastily. The framers intended that this would allow for compromises to be met, but in reality final versions of bills are vastly different from the initial versions.
Bills can be written by members of Congress and their staff or the executive branch and are introduced by a member of Congress. They can also be suggested and written by interest groups and their attorneys.
It doesnโt matter who authors a bill, but only a member of Congress can introduce it and the member who introduces the bill becomes its sponsor.
The legislative process allows for both the House and Senate to work with each other and the bills must be in exactly the same form when they pass both houses. The debating and voting processes in both Chambers differ because of the size of their memberships.
Since the House of Representatives has 435 members the process of debating bills is limited. The Senate only has 100 members, so there are relatively few rules governing it.
The House Rules Committee is responsible for determining how long a bill will be debated and, whether to allow open or closed rules for amending bills. An open rule allows amendments to be added to bills, but closed rules prevent amendments from being added to bills.
The House Rules Committee has been considered one of the most powerful committees in the house because it controls crucial aspects of the legislative process. The Rules Committee can kill a bill by delaying a vote, allow it to be easier for opponents to add poison-pill amendments, or bring the bill up for an immediate floor vote.
Time allotted for debating the bill in question is split equally between its proponents and opponents. The committee cannot itself pass legislation but may debate and propose amendments.
The Speaker of the House is the constitutionally mandated presiding officer of the House of Representatives. The Speaker is chosen in the caucus of the majority party and is empowered to:
recognize members to speak on the floor
rule whether a motion is germane
assign bills to committee
appoint House members to select and joint committees
appoint the majority members of the Rules Committee.
Here are some more key figures:
House Majority Leader: has control of the dominant party in the lower house
House Majority Whip majority: a party leader in the lower house
The House Minority Leader: leader of the minority party in the lower house
President of the Senate: Vice President of the US
President Pro Tempore: most senior member of the majority party and has been appointed to fill in for the Vice President as presiding officer
Senate Majority Leader: role of leadership in the upper house
responsible for passage of the majority party's programs
informs and pressures party members to vote for programs
determine the order in which bills are to be debated
assign members to committees.ย
A debate in the Senate does not have a time limit, so senators can debate for as long as they want.
A filibuster is a tactic used to delay a vote on a bill and tie up the work of the Senate, because a senator makes a speech that continues for hours on the Senate floor.ย The only way to end a filibuster is to vote for a cloture. A cloture requires votes from 60 members to end the filibuster.
Earmarks are provisions within legislation that appropriate money to a specific project in appropriations and authorization bills. Logrolling is when two legislators agree to trade votes for each otherโs benefit.
Pork barrel legislation is the use of federal funding to finance localized projects, typically bringing money into a representativeโs district in order to please constituents and boost the representativeโs chances of winning reelection.
After debates, the bills usually pass in the House and Senate in different forms, so both versions are sent to a conference committee. The conference committee came from the committees in the house and Senate that wrote the bill.
Most of the legislative business in Congress is done in committees. The majority party in power holds all the committee chairs and majority of seats on the committees allowing the party in power to control all the business of the committees.
Most of the legislative work is done in committees, and most proposed bills die in committee.
The Standing Committee is a legislative panel with full legislative functions and oversight responsibilities. The members become experts in their respective topic and examples of committees includeย the Appropriations Committee (sets specific expenditure for the federal government) and the Armed Services Committee (oversees military and defense).
A sub-committee is formed to investigate specific topics within a standing committee. Examples include the Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry (sub committee of agriculture) and the Health Care Subcommittee (sub committee of finance committee).
Select Committees are temporary committees with limited purposes in areas like investigation.ย
A Joint Committee involves members of both the House and Senate, and they have jurisdiction over matters of joint interest. An example of a joint committee is the Joint Committee on the Library, but most joint committees are permanent (as with the Library Committee) but temporary joint committees have been created to address specific issues (such as the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War during the American Civil War).
The conference committee tries to negotiate a compromise bill that is acceptable to both the House and Senate. When a compromise version of the bill has been written, the bill goes to both houses for a vote, and if passed in both houses, it goes to the White House for the president to sign it.ย
When the president gets a bill, he must decide whether to sign or veto legislation within ten days (excluding Sundays) while Congress is in session. There are three things the president can do. If the president signs the bill, it becomes law. He can also veto the bill. The final option is that the president can 'sit' on the bill and take no action. After ten days (excluding Sundays), the bill becomes law without the president's signature.
If a president takes no action and sits on the bill and Congress adjourned before the ten-day period ended, the bill becomes pocket vetoed. When a bill is pocket vetoed it must go through the entire legislative process again.
When the president vetoes a bill, Congress has two options: either make the suggested changes to the bill or try to override the veto by a two-thirds vote.ย If the bill receives a two-thirds vote in both houses, it becomes law without the presidentโs signature or if the house the bill originated in does nothing, the bill is dead.
๐ฅ Watch: AP GOPO - Congress' Two Chambers