congress
committees/law making
Elections/incumbency
the budget
policy-making & oversight
100

What is the main function of Congress?

Make Laws

100

What is the first step for a bill to become a law?

It's introduced in the house or Senate 

100

What is the advantage of incumbency?

name recognition, funding and experience 

100

What is mandatory spending?

spending required by law, like social security 

100

what are the first two steps in the policy-making process

issue identification, policy formulation

200

What is the name of the leader of the House Of Representatives?

Speaker of the house

200

What happens in a conference committee

members resolve difference between house and Senate versions of a bill

200

What is gerrymandering?

drawing districts to favor one party

200

What is discretionary spending?

spending Congress decides yearly, like defense or education 

200

what is the "iron triangle"?

Relationship between Congress, bureaucracy, and interest groups

300

What is the difference between standing and select committees?

Standing is a permanent committe with specific responsibilities, select is created for a specific purpose 

300

What does a rules committee do in the house?

sets terms for debate/amendments

300

What is the term for helping constituents with problems?

casework

300

What is the role of the office of managment and budget.

helps the president draft the budget 

300

what is an example of key legislation affecting the budget or policy?

The affordable care act, or budget control act

400

What are the 3 types of Congressional committed?

standing, joint, conference 

400

What is a filibuster, and how can it be stopped?

taking a bill to death by nonstop talking, cloture vote

400

How does the franking privilege benefit incumbents?

allows them to send mail to constituents for free

400

What happens during a government shutdown?

non essential services stop, employees are dismissed

400

what is divided government and how can it affect policy-making?

different parties control presidency and Congress, it can lead to gridlock

500

Name 2 formal powers exclusive to the Senate?

confirm appointments, ratify treaties, try impeachment 
500

What is the "mark-up" process and committees?

editing/revising a bill before it goes to the floor

500

What is the difference between cracking and packing in gerrymandering?

cracking is spreading voters thin, packing is putting many in one district

500

what is the final step in the budget process?

president signs the budget into law
500

how can Congress check the executive branch during policy-making?

override vetoes, investigate, cut funding, hold hearings

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