Vocabulary
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
Vocabulary
100

Seventeenth Amendment

This amendment broadened democracy by giving the people of the state the right to elect their senators.

100

Size and Term Length 

The more representative House of Representatives is designed to reflect the will of the people and to prevent the kinds of abuses that took place during the colonial period.

100

Caucuses

These groups usually unite around a particular belief or concern.

100

War Powers Act

This law reigns in executive power by requiring the president to inform Congress to vote within 48 hours of committing U.S. forces to combat.

100

Necessary and Proper

It gives congress the power "to make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers".

200

Advice and Consent

allows senators to recommend or reject major presidential appointees such as Cabinet secretaries and federal judges.

200

Senate majority leader

Wields much more power in the Senate than the vice president and pro term.
200

Standing Committees 

Permanent committees focused on a particular policy area are called standing committees.

200

Ways and Means Committee

A committee exclusive to the House that determines tax policy.

200

Joint committees 

Unite members from the House and Senate, such as one to manage the Library of Congress and the Joint Committees on Taxation.

300
Conference committee 
Created to iron out differences on the bill.
300

Rules Committee

Can easily dispose of a bill or define the guidelines for debates because it acts as a traffic cop to the House floor.
300
Committee of the Whole

It was created to allow longer debate among fewer people and to allow members to vote as a group rather than in an individual roll call.

300

Discharge petition

The discharge petition can bring a bill out of a reluctant committee.

300

Unanimous consent 

The approval of all senators and the hold, a measure to stall a bill.

400

Cloture Rule

Which enabled and required a two-thirds supermajority to stop debate on a bill, thus, stopping a filibuster and allowing for a vote.

400

Omnibus Bill

Includes multiple areas of law and/or addresses multiple programs.

400

Individual income taxes

Taxes paid by workers on the income they made during the calendar year.

400

Corporate Taxes 

Taxes paid by businesses on the profits they made during the calendar year.

400

Social insurance taxes

Taxes paid by both employees and employers to fund such programs as Social Security, Medicare, and unemployment insurance.

500

Tariffs and excise taxes

Taxes paid on certain imports or products.

500

Other sources 

Taxes that include interest on government holdings or investments and estates taxes paid by people who inherit a large amount of money.

500

Delegate model

Those members trying to reflect the will of their constituency especially in the House.

500

Trustee model

Representatives believe they are entrusted by their constituency to use their best judgement, regardless of how constituents may view an issue.

500

Gerrymandering 

There are illogical district lines drawn to give the advantage to one party.

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