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bill  A proposed law (legislative act) within Congress or another legislature.
cloture  A parliamentary maneuver that, if a three-fifths majority votes for it, limits Senate debate to thirty hours and has the effect of defeating a filibuster.
conference committees  Temporary committees that are formed to bargain over the differences in the House and Senate versions of a bill. The committee's members are usually appointed from the House and Senate standing committees that originally worked on the bill.
constituency  The individuals who live within the geographical area represented by an elected official. More narrowly, the body of citizens eligible to vote for a particular representative.
filibuster  A procedural tactic in the U.S. Senate whereby a minority of legislators prevents a bill from coming to a vote by holding the floor and talking until the majority gives in and the bill is withdrawn from consideration.
gerrymandering  The process by which the party in power draws election district boundaries in a way that advantages its candidates.
jurisdiction (of a congressional committee)  The policy area in which a particular congressional committee is authorized to act.
law (as enacted by Congress)  A legislative proposal, or bill, that is passed by both the House and Senate and is either signed or not vetoed by the president.
lawmaking function  The authority (of a legislature) to make the laws necessary to carry out the government's powers.
logrolling  The trading of votes between legislators so that each gets what he or she most wants.
open-seat election  An election in which there is no incumbent in the race.
oversight function  A supervisory activity of Congress that centers on its constitutional responsibility to see that the executive carries out the laws faithfully and spends appropriations properly.
party caucus  A group that consists of a party's members in the House or Senate and that serves to elect the party's leadership, set policy goals, and determine party strategy.
party discipline  The willingness of a party's House or Senate members to act together as a cohesive group and thus exert collective control over legislative action.
party leaders  Members of the House and Senate who are chosen by the Democratic or Republican caucus in each chamber to represent the party's interests in that chamber and who give some central direction to the chamber's deliberations.
pork-barrel projects  Legislative acts whose tangible benefits are targeted at a particular legislator's constituency.
reapportionment  The reallocation of House seats among states after each census as a result of population changes.
redistricting  The process of altering election districts in order to make them as nearly equal in population as possible. Redistricting takes place every ten years, after each population census.
representation function  The responsibility of a legislature to represent various interests in society.
rider  An amendment to a bill that deals with an issue unrelated to the content of the bill. Riders are permitted in the Senate but not in the House.
seniority  A member of Congress's consecutive years of service on a particular committee.
service strategy  Use of personal staff by members of Congress to perform services for constituents in order to gain their support in future elections.
standing committees  Permanent congressional committees with responsibility for a particular area of public policy. An example is the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
veto  The president's rejection of a bill, thereby keeping it from becoming law unless Congress overrides the veto.







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