Complete Test Bank Congress Ch.13 Morone - By the People Debating American Government 5e | Test Bank Morone by James A. Morone. DOCX document preview.
Chapter 13: Congress
Test Bank
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 01
1) A congressional caucus convenes regularly to discuss common interests and consists of which of the following?
Feedback: factual
a. Only House members
b. Only Senate members
c. Both House and Senate members
d. Only House leadership
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 02
2) The conference committee is critical because
Feedback: applied
a. it allows the House and Senate to work out a compromise on a particular piece of legislation.
b. it is the first step in the bill-passage process.
c. it is where filibusters occur.
d. it is a permanent group of House and Senate members.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 03
3) All of the following congressional powers can be found in Article 1, Section 8, except
Feedback: factual
a. legal powers.
b. financial powers.
c. administrative powers.
d. national defense powers.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 04
4) A president needs congressional cooperation primarily to
Feedback: applied
a. advance executive policies.
b. debate public policy.
c. use the veto process.
d. limit executive decision making.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 05
5) A House member represents a district of about
Feedback: factual
a. 300,000 people.
b. 100,000 people.
c. 1 million people.
d. 730,000 people.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 06
6) Mark Twain’s comment that “every senator is a little king” suggests that
Feedback: conceptual
a. senators have unlimited power.
b. most senators have life terms.
c. senators possess a remarkable degree of autonomy compared with House members.
d. senators are generally viewed as demagogues.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 07
7) A filibuster is a power unique to the
Feedback: factual
a. House.
b. Senate.
c. House and Senate.
d. presidency.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 08
8) A filibuster can only be stopped by a process called
Feedback: conceptual
a. logrolling.
b. franking.
c. cloture.
d. pork barreling.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 09
9) Congress went from most powerful to increasingly deferential to the White House in the
Feedback: conceptual
a. middle of the twentieth century.
b. early twentieth century.
c. late twentieth century.
d. twenty-first century.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 10
10) Today, diversity is represented in which of the following?
Feedback: applied
a. Both the House and the Senate
b. The House more than the Senate
c. The Senate more than the House
d. Neither the House nor the Senate
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 11
11) The idea of diverse representation can be clearly seen in
Feedback: applied
a. the diversity of House members.
b. the emergence of the Congressional Black Caucus in the House.
c. the number of women in the Senate.
d. the number of minorities in the Senate.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 12
12) Why is the idea of diverse representation important?
Feedback: conceptual
a. It addresses the challenges of popular preference.
b. It allows various constituent interests to be represented.
c. It tempers the idea of one group dominating all others.
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 13
13) Congressional members must provide various levels of representation, which include all of the following except
Feedback: factual
a. geographic representation.
b. descriptive representation.
c. substantive representation.
d. procedural representation.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 14
14) Besides enacting legislation, we would expect members of Congress to spend a significant amount of time
Feedback: applied
a. fundraising.
b. attending ceremonial events.
c. attending conventions.
d. meeting with constituents and staff.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 15
15) A congressional caucus may share which of the following?
Feedback: factual
a. Political outlook
b. Race
c. Gender
d. All of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 16
16) The first woman elected to the House was elected in
Feedback: applied
a. 1914.
b. 1916.
c. 1918.
d. 1920.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 17
17) The reason congressional members should return frequently to their districts or states is the need to
Feedback: conceptual
a. win elections.
b. take advantage of their franking privileges.
c. promote the president’s agenda.
d. seek new challengers.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 18
18) With respect to Congress, the term City on the Hill usually refers to the idea that
Feedback: applied
a. the Capitol building is built on a hill.
b. the Capitol building is the heart of a small city.
c. passing legislation is an uphill struggle.
d. congressional salaries are equal to most CEO salaries.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 19
19) Today, a congressional salary is approximately
Feedback: factual
a. $90,000.
b. equal to the that of the president.
c. equal to that of the average NBA player.
d. $174,000.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 20
20) The idea that a bill is packed with benefits for constituents in a particular district is often known on Capitol Hill as
Feedback: applied
a. a Christmas tree.
b. lucky funding.
c. logrolling.
d. gerrymandering.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 21
21) Someone hoping to enact landmark legislation is sometimes referred to as a
Feedback: applied
a. demagogue.
b. whale.
c. minnow.
d. shark.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 22
22) A member of Congress who lacks the capacity to promote significant reform might be referred to as a
Feedback: applied
a. bass.
b. minnow.
c. darter.
d. whale.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 23
23) Which has the power to impeach the president?
Feedback: applied
a. The Supreme Court
b. The cabinet
c. The House of Representatives
d. The Senate
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 24
24) After the president is impeached, the trial is held in the
Feedback: factual
a. White House.
b. Senate.
c. Supreme Court.
d. House of Representatives.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 25
25) A central function of the Speaker of the House is to
Feedback: conceptual
a. settle all debates.
b. control which issues reach the floor.
c. compromise on key issues.
d. make sure all proposed legislation goes to the president.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 26
26) The second in command in the House is known as the
Feedback: factual
a. minority leader.
b. majority leader.
c. majority whip.
d. minority whip.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 27
27) Party discipline would most likely be achieved by
Feedback: applied
a. the Speaker of the House.
b. the majority leader.
c. the majority whip.
d. the minority leader.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 28
28) The position held by the majority party senator with the longest Senate service is known as
Feedback: factual
a. the vice presidency.
b. the president pro tempore.
c. the majority leader.
d. the majority whip.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 29
29) The only person who can break a tie in the Senate is the
Feedback: factual
a. vice president.
b. president pro tempore.
c. majority leader.
d. majority whip.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 30
30) The greatest concern about proposed legislation is that
Feedback: applied
a. it will pass.
b. it will die in a committee.
c. it will develop into an entirely different piece of legislation.
d. it will not be debated.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 31
31) A _______ committee is a permanent committee in Congress.
Feedback: factual
a. select
b. standing
c. conference
d. social
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 32
32) Special committees are often referred to as _______ committees.
Feedback: factual
a. select
b. standing
c. investigative
d. social
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 33
33) A committee comprising both House and Senate members is often referred to as a _______ committee.
Feedback: factual
a. reserved
b. joint
c. ways and means
d. investigative
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 34
34) Committees are central to Congress because
Feedback: applied
a. they create more jobs for staffers.
b. they allow congressional members to specialize in particular issues.
c. they were mandated by Congress.
d. they allow for easier passage of legislation.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 35
35) The Ways and Means Committee is a permanent committee of the
Feedback: factual
a. House.
b. Senate.
c. House and Senate.
d. executive branch.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 36
36) If you were a House member, one of your goals would be to secure which of the following?
Feedback: applied
a. Earmarks
b. More franking privileges
c. Greater authority
d. More meetings with the Speaker
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 37
37) There are _______ members in Congress.
Feedback: factual
a. 435
b. 535
c. more than 1,000
d. 270
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 38
38) The main responsibility of Congress is which of the following?
Feedback: conceptual
a. To enact legislation
b. To promote hiring
c. To check the president
d. To allow for greater spending
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 39
39) Who can introduce legislation?
Feedback: factual
a. Only House members
b. Only Senate members
c. Both House and Senate members
d. Only senior House and Senate members
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 40
40) How many sponsors are needed for a bill?
Feedback: factual
a. Twelve
b. Three
c. One
d. Seven
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 41
41) The more cosponsors a bill has, the
Feedback: conceptual
a. higher the likelihood of passage.
b. lower the likelihood of passage.
c. more time allowed for debate.
d. higher the placement on the calendar.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 42
42) Major rewrites of a bill occur in the
Feedback: factual
a. conference committee.
b. subcommittee.
c. markup sessions.
d. Judiciary Committee.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 43
43) Most proposed legislation
Feedback: applied
a. becomes law.
b. does not become law.
c. is debated endlessly in the House.
d. is debated endlessly in the Senate.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 44
44) A key legislative reform of the 1970s mandated that
Feedback: applied
a. all proposed legislation be voted on.
b. all committees keep full records of important votes.
c. all critical legislation be debated.
d. all legislation move to the conference committee.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 45
45) In order for a bill to reach the Senate floor, it must have
Feedback: conceptual
a. strong public backing.
b. unanimous consent.
c. the president’s approval.
d. the Speaker’s approval.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 46
46) How many Senate votes does it take to put a bill on hold?
Feedback: conceptual
a. None; bills cannot be put on hold
b. One
c. Three
d. Five
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 47
47) The Senate seeks to lift a legislative hold through the process of
Feedback: conceptual
a. logrolling.
b. gerrymandering.
c. franking.
d. cloture.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 48
48) Noncontroversial bills are voted up or down by a
Feedback: conceptual
a. voice vote.
b. conference vote.
c. roll call vote.
d. cloture vote.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 49
49) On more controversial issues, a _______ is required.
Feedback: conceptual
a. voice vote
b. roll call vote
c. committee vote
d. conference vote
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 50
50) There are _______ nonvoting delegates in Congress.
Feedback: factual
a. four
b. three
c. zero
d. six
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 51
51) All nonvoting delegates serve _______ terms.
Feedback: conceptual
a. one-year
b. two-year
c. three-year
d. four-year
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 52
52) Congress is like a small city because it includes
Feedback: conceptual
a. 541 members.
b. 22,000 staff members.
c. numerous lobbyists.
d. all of the above.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 53
53) Congressional committees aid and _______ the legislative process.
Feedback: conceptual
a. improve
b. fragment
c. redirect
d. rectify
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 54
54) What percentage of bills become law?
Feedback: factual
a. 3 percent
b. 12 percent
c. 17 percent
d. 48 percent
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 55
55) House-Senate conferences are aimed at yielding a(n)
Feedback: conceptual
a. single version of a bill.
b. bill the president will sign.
c. annotated bill.
d. cheaper version of the bill.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 56
56) The House and Senate versions of a bill must be _______ before the bill goes to the president.
Feedback: conceptual
a. similar
b. identical
c. different
d. complex
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 57
57) A bill most likely will falter after it leaves the conference committee because
Feedback: applied
a. the president could veto it.
b. the president could invoke cloture.
c. a Senate member could filibuster.
d. unanimous votes are required.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 58
58) To overcome a presidential veto, Congress needs
Feedback: conceptual
a. two-thirds approval of the House.
b. three-quarters approval of the Senate.
c. two-thirds approval of the House and Senate.
d. four-fifths approval of the House and Senate.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 59
59) How many Senators does it take to override a veto?
Feedback: conceptual
a. Fifty-seven
b. Sixty-seven
c. Seventy-seven
d. Eighty-seven
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 60
60) All budget measures must begin in the
Feedback: factual
a. conference committee.
b. House.
c. Senate.
d. House or Senate.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 61
61) Impeachment proceedings begin in
Feedback: factual
a. the House.
b. the Senate.
c. a subcommittee.
d. a standing committee.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 62
62) Prior to 1913, the _______ was elected directly by the public.
Feedback: factual
a. Senate
b. House
c. president
d. Supreme Court
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 63
63) A system to remove public officials because they have committed high crimes and misdemeanors is known as
Feedback: conceptual
a. an indictment.
b. an impeachment.
c. an arraignment.
d. an oversight.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 64
64) To approve a treaty, the Senate must reach a _______ decision.
Feedback: factual
a. simple majority
b. three-fifths
c. two-thirds
d. unanimous
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 65
65) The Senate can do all of the following except
Feedback: conceptual
a. ratify treaties.
b. review presidential appointees.
c. introduce monetary measures.
d. use the filibuster.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 66
66) It can be inferred that House and Senate power is
Feedback: applied
a. roughly equal.
b. increasing.
c. more tilted toward the Senate.
d. more tilted toward the House.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 67
67) The Senate has sole power to review
Feedback: conceptual
a. budget legislation.
b. presidential nominations.
c. infrastructure laws.
d. health care concerns.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 68
68) Senate terms last _______ years.
Feedback: factual
a. four
b. two
c. three
d. six
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 69
69) The 2020–2021 Congress is the
Feedback: applied
a. 116th Congress.
b. 117th Congress.
c. 118th Congress.
d. 119th Congress.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 70
70) The power to pass legislation remains with
Feedback: conceptual
a. the president.
b. Congress.
c. the House of Representatives only.
d. the Senate only.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 71
71) A bill goes to the floor for
Feedback: conceptual
a. the final debate.
b. signatures.
c. a filibuster.
d. printing.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 72
72) A senator who dislikes the president’s actions can place a legislative _______ on all legislation the president supports.
Feedback: applied
a. veto
b. hold
c. enjoinder
d. clarification
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 73
73) The “People’s Branch" is otherwise referred to as
Feedback: applied
a. the House.
b. the Senate.
c. Congress.
d. the courts.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 74
74) The Constitution places which branch of government at the center of American government?
Feedback: factual
a. Congress
b. Executive branch
c. Judicial branch
d. Bureaucracy
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 75
75) Reasons for lack of congressional action center on
Feedback: applied
a. congressional salaries.
b. the work commitment of members of Congress.
c. partisan fighting and gridlock.
d. Congress’s lack of diversity.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 76
76) During the 1950s and 1960s, the Senate was mostly controlled by the
Feedback: factual
a. Democrats.
b. Republicans.
c. Libertarians.
d. Socialists.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 77
77) The percentage of members who voted with their party majority was _______ before 1990.
Feedback: conceptual
a. 65%
b. 90%
c. 38%
d. 52%
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 78
78) Since 1990, congressional members have voted _______ along party lines.
Feedback: factual
a. 75 percent
b. 65 percent
c. 90 percent
d. 100 percent
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 79
79) The situation in which the presidency and at least one of the two chambers of Congress are controlled by different parties is referred to as
Feedback: conceptual
a. a divided government.
b. a subdued government.
c. an open government.
d. a bifurcated government.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 80
80) Detailed accounting of legislative organization and authority is found in which part of the Constitution?
Feedback: conceptual
a. Article 1
b. Article 2
c. Article 3
d. Article 4
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 81
81) The power to tax is part of the _______ role of Congress.
Feedback: applied
a. financial
b. economic
c. administrative
d. institutional
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 82
82) According to the Constitution, who is responsible for regulating trade and commerce among the states?
Feedback: applied
a. State legislatures
b. The U.S. Congress
c. The president
d. State governors
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 83
83) According to the text, Congress has become more
Feedback: conceptual
a. partisan.
b. cooperative.
c. trustworthy.
d. effective.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 84
84) According to James Madison, it is _______ that groups will pursue their own interests.
Feedback: applied
a. likely
b. unlikely
c. inevitable
d. questionable
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 85
85) Madison argued that the best way to control factions was to
Feedback: applied
a. outlaw them.
b. balance them against one another.
c. ignore them.
d. limit their numbers.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 86
86) One of the major reform challenges relating to Congress involves
Feedback: factual
a. military spending.
b. senior leadership.
c. lobbyists.
d. the intricate relationship between Congress and the presidency.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 87
87) Lobbyists present a problem because they can _______ the political agenda.
Feedback: applied
a. destroy
b. reduce
c. overly influence
d. minimize
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 88
88) Congressional reelection rates are so high because
Feedback: conceptual
a. there are few challengers.
b. members of Congress serve their constituencies well.
c. members of Congress pass a great deal of legislation.
d. overall congressional public approval ratings are high.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 89
89) Where would we find a constituent?
Feedback: applied
a. In a state
b. In a district
c. In a borough
d. In all of the above
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 90
90) Most congressional powers are described in
Feedback: factual
a. Article 1, Section 9.
b. Article 1, Section 8.
c. Article 2, Section 3.
d. Article 2, Section 1.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 91
91) Setting up federal courts is part of the _______ role of Congress.
Feedback: factual
a. national defense
b. institutional
c. administrative
d. legal
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 92
92) The power to establish U.S. citizenship laws lies with the
Feedback: factual
a. president.
b. Congress.
c. Supreme Court.
d. states.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 93
93) Geographic representation assures that members of Congress live in
Feedback: factual
a. Washington, D.C.
b. the state or district they represent.
c. the United States.
d. the most populous part of their district or state.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 94
94) The first woman elected to the House was from
Feedback: factual
a. Wyoming.
b. Montana.
c. New York.
d. Virginia.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 95
95) “I take my voting instructions directly from my constituents” would likely be said by which type of legislator?
Feedback: applied
a. Trustee
b. Delegate
c. Incumbent
d. Retiring
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 96
96) U.S. House members spend most of their time
Feedback: factual
a. meeting with staff.
b. engaging in floor action.
c. doing office work.
d. attending caucus meetings.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 97
97) Most congressional members work in Washington
Feedback: factual
a. Monday through Friday.
b. Wednesday only.
c. Tuesday through Thursday.
d. seven days a week.
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 98
98) Which is the only building allowed to be taller than the Capitol building?
Feedback: factual
a. White House
b. Lincoln Memorial
c. Smithsonian Museum
d. Washington Monument
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 99
99) In what year did Senators begin having staffs?
Feedback: factual
a. 1891
b. 1893
c. 1895
d. 1897
Type: multiple choice question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 100
100) Who handles most constituent requests?
Feedback: factual
a. Chief of staff
b. Legislative director
c. Legislative correspondent
d. Press secretary
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 101
101) What is a congressional caucus?
Feedback:
Group of House and Senate members who meet to discuss common interests.
They may share demographic characteristics, geography, or issue concerns.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 102
102) What is a conference committee?
Feedback:
House and Senate bills must be identical before bill can be sent to the president.
Conference committee reconciles differences between the House and Senate versions.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 103
103) What is bicameralism, and why was it established?
Feedback:
Two-chamber legislature.
Created both to satisfy populists (House) and to guarantee small-state representation (Senate).
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 104
104) What are some demographics that have been changing in Congress?
Feedback:
More minority and female representation in the House, but not in the Senate.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 105
105) From which part of the Constitution does Congress primarily draw its powers, and what is described there?
Feedback:
Article 1, Section 8.
Financial, legal, and national defense powers.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 106
106) What is significant about the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments?
Feedback:
Allow Congress to enforce African American civil rights.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 107
107) What is a filibuster, and which chamber holds this power?
Feedback:
Rule unique to the U.S. Senate.
Allows any senator to hold the floor indefinitely.
Used in the Senate since the 1800s.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 108
108) Where does a money bill begin?
Feedback:
It must be introduced in the House of Representatives.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 109
109) What are the term lengths for House and Senate members?
Feedback:
Two-year terms for House members and six-year terms for Senate members.
Senate members do not all run at the same time.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 110
110) In what ways do senators represent their constituents?
Feedback:
Geographic representation.
Descriptive representation.
Substantive representation.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 111
111) Who are the people who assist House members in their daily activities?
Feedback:
Legislative director, press secretary, scheduler, and legislative correspondents.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 112
112) What is meant by Christmas tree legislation?
Feedback:
Funding for a particular district.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 113
113) What is the difference between whales and minnows?
Feedback:
Whales are Congress members who could enact landmark legislation.
Minnows are Congress members who simply follow others.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 114
114) What is the difference between a standing committee and a select committee?
Feedback:
A standing committee is a permanent committee.
A select committee is a temporary committee.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 115
115) Describe the Ways and Means Committee.
Feedback:
It is a permanent investigative committee of the House of Representatives.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 116
116) Why is Congress called a small city?
Feedback:
541 members.
22,000 staff.
Army of lobbyists.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 117
117) How can a filibuster be stopped?
Feedback:
Invocation of cloture.
60 percent of the senators must vote for cloture.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 118
118) How can Congress overcome a presidential veto?
Feedback:
Two-thirds approval of both House and Senate.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 119
119) What is a divided government?
Feedback:
No party has majority control of all three elected arms of government.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 120
120) What are nonvoting delegates to the House of Representatives?
Feedback:
Representatives who do not have the right to vote.
Elected by Washington, DC; Puerto Rico; Guam; American Samoa; and other U.S. territories.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 121
121) Why is Congress the “broken branch”?
Feedback:
Archaic rules.
Dysfunctional gridlock.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 122
122) Discuss the financial powers of Congress.
Feedback:
Tax.
Borrow.
Pay national debts.
Provide for the common defense.
Regulate trade and commerce.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 123
123) What are the legal powers of Congress?
Feedback:
Establish U.S. citizenship laws.
Regulate bankruptcy laws.
Issue U.S. money.
Punish counterfeiters.
Establish patent system.
Fix national weights/measures standards.
Impeach presidents and federal judges.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 124
124) What are the institutional roles of Congress?
Feedback:
Organize judicial and executive branches.
Establish a postal system.
Set up and control national capital.
Admit new states.
Exercise control over U.S. territories.
Alter the time, place, and manner of congressional elections as set by state law.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 125
125) What are Congress’s national defense roles?
Feedback:
Declare war.
Regulate rules for prisoners of war.
Raise and fund defense forces.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 126
126) Discuss the basic makeup of the House of Representatives.
Feedback:
435 members, plus 6 nonvoting members.
Based on population.
Two-year term.
District of around 730,000 per representative.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 127
127) Discuss the basic makeup of the Senate.
Feedback:
100 members.
Two from each U.S. state.
Six-year term.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 128
128) How can a filibuster end?
Feedback:
Senator stops filibuster.
Cloture vote: sixty senators vote to end filibusters
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 129
129) Discuss the importance of Jeannette Rankin.
Feedback:
First woman elected to the House of Representatives.
Voted against entry into World War I and World War II.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 130
130) Which historically underrepresented group has risen most rapidly?
Feedback:
Women.
Provide some statistics from text to support answer.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 131
131) What is the difference between trustee and delegate representation?
Feedback:
Trustee: do what the people want.
Delegate: do the right things
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 132
132) What are the main responsibilities of Congress, and which is most closely related to policy development?
Feedback:
Enact legislation.
Serve multiple interests.
Geographic representation.
Descriptive representation.
Substantive representation most closely related to policy interests.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 133
133) What is the significance of Article 1, Section 8, and Amendments Thirteen, Fourteen, and Fifteen?
Feedback:
They are the sources of Congress’s power.
Financial power—such as power to tax and coin money.
Legal power—such as power to establish U.S. citizenship laws.
Institutional power—such as power to establish the postal system.
National defense power—such as power to declare war.
Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments used to ensure full application of civil rights laws.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 134
134) What is a conference committee, and why is it so essential in the bill process?
Feedback:
Last committee before bill goes to the president.
House and Senate must agree on identical terms.
If presidential veto occurs, Congress can override only on terms from conference committee.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 135
135) What is bicameralism, and what are four seminal differences between the House and Senate?
Feedback:
Two-chamber legislature.
House has 435 voting members.
Age minimum of twenty-five.
Two-year terms.
Smaller staffs.
Less prestige.
Senate has 100 members.
Six-year terms.
Age minimum of thirty.
Larger staffs.
More prestige.
Less diversity.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 136
136) Does Congress reflect America?
Feedback:
More in the House than in the Senate.
More minority, especially African American, and female representation in the House.
Greater number of professions represented over the past fifty years.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 137
137) What makes for good representation?
Feedback:
Need to address constituents' representative interests.
Need to provide funding to particular districts.
Successful achievement of Christmas gift or earmark projects.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 138
138) Discuss how a congressperson divides his or her time.
Feedback:
General meetings.
Meetings with constituents.
Ceremonial events.
Fundraising.
Member meetings.
Floor action.
Office work.
Informal talks.
Caucus talks.
Other.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 139
139) What would Madison say about the need for bicameralism?
Feedback:
Would be supportive of it.
Need to balance one interest against others.
House reflects populist interests.
Senate reflects guaranteed representation for smaller-population state.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 140
140) Describe how a bill is passed.
Feedback:
Bill can be introduced in House or Senate.
Financial bills must be introduced in House.
Bills go through several committee processes.
Open rule allows for amendment process.
Closed rule allows for no amendment process.
“King of the Hill” is the final approved amendment to a proposed piece of legislation, which is the amendment that prevails.
Conference committee.
President.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 141
141) Describe the House and Senate structures.
Feedback:
House: Speaker of the House.
Majority leader.
Minority leader.
Majority whip.
Minority whip.
Senate: vice president is head of Senate.
President pro tempore.
Majority leader.
Minority leader.
Majority whip.
Minority whip.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 142
142) What are some general characteristics of the bill-making process?
Feedback:
Bills often have creative titles and multiple authors.
Congressional committees are the central actors in legislative policy making.
Floor procedures like roll call and unanimous consent are parts of the intricate process.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 143
143) Why is Congress viewed both favorably and unfavorably?
Feedback:
Low bill passage rate.
Partisan politics.
Difficulties in coming to consensus.
High rate of incumbency due to earmarks to particular districts.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 144
144) What is the relation of Congress to the presidency on foreign policy?
Feedback:
Congress has sole power to declare war.
No declaration of war since WWII.
Congress is very deferential to the president.
Nation looks to president to address military concerns.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 145
145) Compare and contrast descriptive representation and substantive representation.
Feedback:
Descriptive representation relates to the composition of Congress in relation to the general public in terms of, for example, demographic characteristics.
The House is more representative in this regard than the Senate.
Substantive representation relates more to public policy concerns and funding to particular districts.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 146
146) Why is Washington, DC called the City on the Hill?
Feedback:
City within a city: six grand office buildings house Congressional members and staff.
Three ornate structures house Library of Congress—largest library in the world.
Gyms, chapel, bank, post office.
435 House and 100 Senate members.
More than 25,000 staff members.
250-member Capitol police force.
U.S. poet laureate.
75,000 or so lobbyists.
Nonvoting delegates.
Thousands of college students each summer.
Many traditions.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 147
147) Is Congress reflective of elite or pluralist theory?
Feedback:
Descriptive representation.
Annual salaries by profession.
Role of lobbyists in influencing Congress.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 148
148) Compare and contrast standing, select, and joint committees. Why are they so important?
Feedback:
Permanent versus temporary committees.
Joint committee includes both House and Senate members.
Committees allow congressional members to specialize.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 149
149) How do separation of powers and checks and balances relate to Congress?
Feedback:
We want Congress to enact legislation.
President should enforce the legislation.
Congress can check the presidency and override a presidential veto.
Yet Congress can’t usurp power from other branches and can’t override presidential vetoes with less than a two-thirds majority in both chambers.
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 150
150) What are some examples of creative legislative titles, and did the bills pass?
Feedback:
Clarifying Lawful Overseas Use of Data (CLOUD) Act, 2018.
EGO (Eliminating Government-funded Oil-Painting) Act, 2013.
Personal Responsibility in Consumption Act, 2006.
What Really Happened Act, 2002.
Only CLOUD passed.
Titles show that Congress is deliberate in the legislative process and that, as Madison said, it is central to “control the passions of the moment.”
Type: essay/short answer question
Title: Chapter 13 Question 151
151) How can the Senate check the presidency?
Feedback:
Ratify treaty with two-thirds vote.
Two-thirds vote to convict in impeachment.
Confirm presidential appointees.
Reflects use of checks and balances.
Document Information
Connected Book
By the People Debating American Government 5e | Test Bank Morone
By James A. Morone