Party Leaders Past
Congressional Concepts
Rules
Congress & The President
More Concepts Please
100

This Speaker managed a 5-vote majority and was able to pass two major infrastructure bills.

Nancy Pelosi

100

When the Speaker prevents a divisive bill from ever reaching the floor to protect the party's brand.

Negative Agenda Control

100

This type of House rule prohibits any amendments from being offered to a bill on the floor.

Closed Rule

100

This occurs when the president doesn't sign or return a bill within ten days and Congress has adjourned.

Pocket Veto

100

Broockman and Skovron (2018) found that political elites systematically perceive their constituents as more __________ than they actually are.

Conservative

200

This Senate leader blocked Merrick Garland's Supreme Court nomination for 11 months using scheduling power alone. No hearing, no vote.

Mitch McConnell

200

The committee theory that says members seek assignments matching their constituents' interests — farmers on Agriculture, defense districts on Armed Services.

Distributive Theory

200

You need this many votes to invoke cloture and end a Senate filibuster.

60

200

These presidential statements accompany signed bills and sometimes signal the president's intent not to enforce certain provisions.

Signing Statements

200

Anzia and Berry (2011) named their theory after this baseball player, arguing that discrimination means only the most talented women win elections.

Jackie Robinson

300

This Speaker earned the nickname "Czar" for counting silent members as present, ending the disappearing quorum.

Thomas Brackett Reed

300

The Senate maneuver where the Majority Leader uses first right of recognition to fill all available amendment slots, blocking unwanted proposals.

Amendment Tree-Filling

300

This 1939 law restricts federal employees from engaging in partisan political activity in their official capacity.

Hatch Act

300

The strategy where a president appeals directly to the public to pressure Congress, sometimes called the "rhetorical presidency."

Going Public

300

Wilson and Young (1997) identified three cosponsorship signals: bandwagon, ideological, and this third type, where having a committee chair as cosponsor signals quality.

Expertise Signal

400

This progressive Republican from Nebraska led the 1910 revolt against Speaker Cannon by offering a privileged resolution to strip the Speaker from the Rules Committee.

George Norris

400

The theory that says leaders are only as powerful as their caucuses allow them to be, based on ideological unity and desire for majority status.

Conditional Party Government

400

This procedure allows the House to force a bill out of committee if a majority of members sign it.

Discharge Petition

400

To prevent presidential recess appointments, the Senate uses these — convening for just a few seconds to technically remain "in session."

Pro Forma Sessions

400

Krutz (2001) identified three explanations for omnibus legislating: politics, efficiency, and this third one — where bundling helps forge deals by combining unrelated provisions members each want.

Logrolling

500

This House Majority Leader held the 2003 Medicare vote open for nearly 3 hours and was later admonished by the Ethics Committee.

Tom Delay

500

Kingdon's framework where a policy window opens when the problem, policy, and politics streams converge.

Multiple Streams Framework
500

This House rule automatically adopts changes to a bill when the rule itself is adopted. No separate vote required.

Self-Executing Rule

500

The 1998 Supreme Court case that struck down the Line Item Veto Act for violating the Presentment Clause.

Clinton v. City of New York

500

In Cameron's veto bargaining model, vetoes should never happen under this condition — but they do because Congress doesn't know the president's true preferences.

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