Deck 8: Congressional Rules and Procedures

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Question
Which of the following steps comes first in the lawmaking process?

A) floor debate
B) report from committee
C) introduction into the House or Senate
D) conference committee
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Question
In the House, bills that raise or spend money are assigned to the ______.

A) Union Calendar
B) House Calendar
C) Senate Calendar
D) Private Calendar
Question
What does a waiver from the Rules Committee accomplish?

A) requires an up-or-down vote after three hours of debate on the floor of the House
B) sets aside technical violations of the rules to allow bills to reach the floor
C) waives the requirement of tax bills originating in the House
D) forces a committee to report a bill favorably
Question
Which of these procedures is the most common way to pass bills in the House?

A) structured rules
B) suspension of the rules
C) cloture
D) unanimous consent
Question
Which of the following types of bills are considered "privileged" in the House and granted privileged access to the floor?

A) judicial appointments
B) labor and workforce
C) commemorative holidays
D) appropriations
Question
Which House committee is considered the "traffic cop" of the House floor?

A) Rules
B) Ways and Means
C) Ethics
D) Appropriations
Question
Which of the following is true of a structured or restricted rule?

A) No amendments may be considered on the House floor.
B) Amendments must be approved in advance by the Rules Committee.
C) Debate is strictly limited to two hours for each party.
D) Only party leadership may offer amendments on the House floor.
Question
All of the following are types of rules granted by the Rules Committee EXCEPT ______.

A) open
B) amended
C) closed
D) modified
Question
During general debate on the House floor, which of the following is true?

A) Members engage in extensive back-and-forth exchanges.
B) The majority party receives twice as much time to present its case.
C) Most legislators read prepared speech.
D) Amendments are voted on.
Question
Which of these is the most common or important way for bills to reach the floor of the Senate?

A) scheduling by the chair
B) special rule from the Rules Committee
C) discharge petition
D) unanimous consent
Question
Minority party members are more likely than majority party members to sign a discharge petition.
Question
Most House business is conducted Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday to accommodate members traveling home to their districts.
Question
Only members of Congress can introduce legislation.
Question
The House is required to debate legislation once it is placed on an official calendar.
Question
Only members of Congress can draft legislation.
Question
Members of the minority party typically prefer restrictive rules when bringing legislation to the floor.
Question
Everything in politics is timing.
Question
Members try to draft bill language so their bills will be referred to a friendly committee.
Question
Lawmaking is a simple, yet, time insensitive process.
Question
The rise of partisan acrimony triggered an increase in traditional rules.
Question
Only House members are permitted to offer nongermane amendments on the floor; this practice is prohibited in the Senate.
Question
The Senate's rules emphasize individual prerogatives and minority rights.
Question
In the modern Senate, even the threat of a filibuster is sufficient to block action on many bills or nominations.
Question
Filibusters are most effective late in the legislative session because there may not be sufficient time to break it.
Question
The amending process is the heart of decision-making on the floor of the House.
Question
What is a hold, and how does it fit with the norm of individualism in the Senate?
Question
How does the cluster voting rule relate to the idea of the "two Congresses?"
Question
Congress has been described as a "procedural obstacle course." What does this description mean?
Question
How can the Senate obtain floor action when a bill is blocked in committee?
Question
How does an open rule differ from a closed rule?
Question
Why do members of Congress introduce legislation? Outline the three broad categories and give an example of each.
Question
How do elections influence the timing of legislation?
Question
How might the amendment process in the House have electoral consequences?
Question
Why has the creative use of complex rules expanded in recent years?
Question
Why has the number of bills passed by Congress declined in recent years?
Question
How has the role of the Rules Committee changed over Congress's history?
Question
What recourse do House members have if a committee refuses to report a bill? Are these methods effective?
Question
What are the six steps observed for passing a major bill in the House?
Question
Why are rules from the Rules Committee rarely defeated on the House floor?
Question
Identify a recent bill passed by Congress. Use Thomas.gov to track how the bill progressed through both chambers. Which committees was it referred to? What rules was it considered under? How did procedural concerns shape the progress of the bill through the chambers?
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Deck 8: Congressional Rules and Procedures
1
Which of the following steps comes first in the lawmaking process?

A) floor debate
B) report from committee
C) introduction into the House or Senate
D) conference committee
C
2
In the House, bills that raise or spend money are assigned to the ______.

A) Union Calendar
B) House Calendar
C) Senate Calendar
D) Private Calendar
A
3
What does a waiver from the Rules Committee accomplish?

A) requires an up-or-down vote after three hours of debate on the floor of the House
B) sets aside technical violations of the rules to allow bills to reach the floor
C) waives the requirement of tax bills originating in the House
D) forces a committee to report a bill favorably
B
4
Which of these procedures is the most common way to pass bills in the House?

A) structured rules
B) suspension of the rules
C) cloture
D) unanimous consent
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5
Which of the following types of bills are considered "privileged" in the House and granted privileged access to the floor?

A) judicial appointments
B) labor and workforce
C) commemorative holidays
D) appropriations
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6
Which House committee is considered the "traffic cop" of the House floor?

A) Rules
B) Ways and Means
C) Ethics
D) Appropriations
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7
Which of the following is true of a structured or restricted rule?

A) No amendments may be considered on the House floor.
B) Amendments must be approved in advance by the Rules Committee.
C) Debate is strictly limited to two hours for each party.
D) Only party leadership may offer amendments on the House floor.
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Unlock for access to all 40 flashcards in this deck.
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8
All of the following are types of rules granted by the Rules Committee EXCEPT ______.

A) open
B) amended
C) closed
D) modified
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9
During general debate on the House floor, which of the following is true?

A) Members engage in extensive back-and-forth exchanges.
B) The majority party receives twice as much time to present its case.
C) Most legislators read prepared speech.
D) Amendments are voted on.
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10
Which of these is the most common or important way for bills to reach the floor of the Senate?

A) scheduling by the chair
B) special rule from the Rules Committee
C) discharge petition
D) unanimous consent
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11
Minority party members are more likely than majority party members to sign a discharge petition.
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12
Most House business is conducted Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday to accommodate members traveling home to their districts.
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13
Only members of Congress can introduce legislation.
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14
The House is required to debate legislation once it is placed on an official calendar.
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15
Only members of Congress can draft legislation.
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16
Members of the minority party typically prefer restrictive rules when bringing legislation to the floor.
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17
Everything in politics is timing.
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18
Members try to draft bill language so their bills will be referred to a friendly committee.
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19
Lawmaking is a simple, yet, time insensitive process.
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k this deck
20
The rise of partisan acrimony triggered an increase in traditional rules.
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21
Only House members are permitted to offer nongermane amendments on the floor; this practice is prohibited in the Senate.
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k this deck
22
The Senate's rules emphasize individual prerogatives and minority rights.
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23
In the modern Senate, even the threat of a filibuster is sufficient to block action on many bills or nominations.
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k this deck
24
Filibusters are most effective late in the legislative session because there may not be sufficient time to break it.
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25
The amending process is the heart of decision-making on the floor of the House.
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26
What is a hold, and how does it fit with the norm of individualism in the Senate?
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27
How does the cluster voting rule relate to the idea of the "two Congresses?"
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28
Congress has been described as a "procedural obstacle course." What does this description mean?
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29
How can the Senate obtain floor action when a bill is blocked in committee?
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30
How does an open rule differ from a closed rule?
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31
Why do members of Congress introduce legislation? Outline the three broad categories and give an example of each.
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k this deck
32
How do elections influence the timing of legislation?
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33
How might the amendment process in the House have electoral consequences?
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34
Why has the creative use of complex rules expanded in recent years?
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35
Why has the number of bills passed by Congress declined in recent years?
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36
How has the role of the Rules Committee changed over Congress's history?
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37
What recourse do House members have if a committee refuses to report a bill? Are these methods effective?
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38
What are the six steps observed for passing a major bill in the House?
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39
Why are rules from the Rules Committee rarely defeated on the House floor?
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40
Identify a recent bill passed by Congress. Use Thomas.gov to track how the bill progressed through both chambers. Which committees was it referred to? What rules was it considered under? How did procedural concerns shape the progress of the bill through the chambers?
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