|
Terms
|
Definitions
|
| Bill
or Legislation |
Every change in law
or new law that a particular member wants to propose is offered
in a written form called a bill. This is a specific written document
that dictates exactly what provisions of law would need to be changed
in order to make the policy change that is being sought. When the
bill is introduced, it is given a number and assigned to a specific
committee for debate and approval. Usually, far more bills are introduced
than laws enacted. For example in the 104th Congress, 6,808 bills
were introduced in the House and Senate and only 333 new laws enacted.
Bills that start with “H.R.” or “S” (H.R 123 or S 123, for example)
are proposals that would make an actual change in law and must be
voted upon by both the House and the Senate and signed by the President
before being enacted.
|
| Joint
Resolutions |
Proposals that start
with “HJRes” or “SJRes” are joint resolutions that also must be
voted upon by the House and the Senate and signed by the President.
The only difference between bills and joint resolutions is that
the latter are usually focused on one specific policy question,
or are constitutional amendments.
|
| Concurrent
Resolutions |
Concurrent Resolutions
are introduced in either the House or the Senate and start with
“HConRes” or “SConRes.” These resolutions must be passed by both
the House and Senate, but do not have the force of law, so they
do not have to be signed by the President. In general, they deal
with internal congressional issues, like the timing for an adjournment,
or expressing congressional opinion on various policy matters.
|
|
Chairman
|
The member who leads
a committee. This person is always a member of the majority party.
Both full committees and subcommittees have chairmen. Chairmen,
working with the party leadership, determine what bills they will
consider. They cannot consider all the bills that are introduced
in a given session.
|
| A
“Congress” vs. the U.S. Congress |
Every two-year period
for which representatives are elected to serve is numbered and referred
to as a “Congress.” For example, the two-year period from 1997 to
1998 was the 105th Congress. Members who were elected or reelected
in November 1996 served during this time. Likewise, the two-year
period from 1995 to 1996 was the 104th Congress. These designations
apply to both the House and Senate even though not all individual
senators are up for reelection every two-years. The entire organization
is called the U.S. Congress.
|
| Cosponsor |
Once
one member introduces a bill, other members may show their support
by putting their names on the bill as a cosponsor. In general, a bill’s
sponsor wants as many cosponsors for the bill as possible to give
the bill a greatly likelihood of being passed. |
| Floor
or Chamber |
Literally,
the place where members of the House or Senate come together to debate
bills. When a bill is “on the floor” it means that the bill is being
actively considered, or debated, by the House or Senate membership.
When a bill is “sent to the floor” it means that the bill will be
considered by the members. |
| Party
Leadership or Leadership |
Each
party, whether the minority or the majority, has a small cadre of
members who have been elected by their colleagues to assume responsibility
for leading the party. These members are generally very powerful,
especially the majority leadership, because they set the agenda and
decide which bills (see below) will be considered by the entire House
or Senate membership. Some of the positions in the leadership are:
House: Speaker (the head of the majority party); Minority Leader (the
head of the minority party); Majority Leader (second to the Speaker
in the majority party); Majority and Minority Whips (focused on “whipping”
the membership or convincing them to support the party agenda during
votes). Senate: President of the Senate (under the Constitution, this
office is held by the Vice President); President Pro Tempore (a senator
designated by the president of the Senate to act in his or her place);
Majority Leader (leads the majority party in the Senate); Minority
Leader (leads the minority party in the Senate). |
| A
“Session” |
Each
Congress is divided into two one-year periods called sessions. The
first year of a Congress is the first session and the second year
of a Congress in the second session. |