Districting
House+
Senate rules
Budgeting
Presidential Powers
stuff
100

the process of drawing electoral district boundaries

redistricting


100

Head of the US House of Representatives elected by a majority of the chamber

Speaker of the House

100

spending money on social security, medicare, medicaid

Mandatory spending

100

prevents a congressional-passed law from going into effect or if the president refuses to sign a bill and congress adjourns within 10 working days of it being submitted. 

Veto and pocket veto

100

Getting public support, along with bargaining and persuasion, helps the president get Congress to act according to his wishes.

Bully Pulprit 

200

Tennessee had not redrawn its legislative districts in decades. Population shifts made rural votes worth more than urban votes. Voters argued this violated equal representation. Court said redistricting is a justiciable issue

Baker v Carr

200

used to delay or block a vote on legislation through extended debate

fillabuster

200

spending on defense, education, infrastructure

Discretionary 

200

formal agreement between the president and a foreign leader

Executive Agreement

200

An annual message delivered by the President of the United States to a joint session of Congress, in which the president reports on the condition of the country and outlines the legislative agenda and national priorities.

State of the Union

300

redistribution of the 435 seats in the House of Representatives among the 50 states, conducted every 10 years based on population shifts. 

reapportionment

300

powerful legislative panel that determines the rules and procedures for debating and voting on bills.

rules committee

300

government appropriation of funds for localized projects intended to please voters or donors, often funding unnecessary or wasteful projects.

Pork Barreling

300

a directive issued by the U.S. President to federal agencies, managing operations of the executive branch, and directing how legislation is implemented. (tells government officials how to act or interpret exsiting laws)

Executive Order

300

a strict, narrow method of interpreting the Constitution or statutes by adhering only to the exact, ordinary wording of the text. 




Literalism

400

manipulation of electoral district boundaries to give one political party an unfair advantage

gerrymandering

400

a procedural tool in the U.S. House of Representatives used to force a bill out of a committee and onto the House floor for a vote, bypassing leadership and committee inaction.

discharge petition

400

the political practice of trading votes or favors, where legislators support each other's preferred, often local, projects to ensure passage of a larger bill

Logrolling

400

an official written pronouncement issued by the President of the United States upon signing a bill into law.

signing statements

400

strong, active presidency where the president acts as a "steward" of the people, exercising any powers necessary to serve the national interest unless specifically prohibited by the Constitution or law.

stewardship

500

NC created two majority-minority districts to increase black representation. The Court ruled that gerrymandering can violate the Equal Protection Clause. 

Shaw v Reno

500

a Senate procedure used to end a filibuster and bring a debate to a close, forcing a vote on a bill, motion, or amendment

Cloture

500

government-funded initiatives that guarantee specific benefits to individuals who meet legal eligibility requirements, such as age, income, or disability.

Entitlements

500

document that argues for a single, "energetic" executive (president) rather than a plural executive. What and who wrote it

Federalist #70- Hamilton

500

a government structure where all key power and authority are concentrated in a central (national) government, rather than shared with regional or local governments

Unitary