Calendar – List of bills awaiting action,
entered in order reported.
Cap – The legal limit on new spending
and budget authority in a discretionary appropriations category
of the budget during a particular fiscal year.
Capped Entitlement – An entitlement on
which an overall annual funding limit is placed and funding is
distributed by formula.
Casework – Assistance to constituents
who seek help in dealing with federal and local government agencies.
Constituent service is a high priority in most members’
offices. Caseworkers on members’ staff advise constituents
about agency regulations and procedures, determine whether any
complaints are justified, and try to persuade agencies to rectify
errors or injustices. Most cases involve problems with Social
Security benefits, veterans’ benefits, and immigration.
Casting Vote – The Vice President’s
vote while presiding over the Senate. It may be cast only to break
a tie vote, but the Vice President is not required to vote.
Categorical Grant – An allocation of funds
for a particular programmatic purpose.
Caucus – Meeting of legislators of the
same political party to decide policy or a course of action.
Censure – The strongest formal condemnation
of a member for misconduct short of expulsion. A house usually
adopts a resolution of censure to express its condemnation, after
which the presiding officer reads its rebuke aloud to the member
in the presence of his or her colleagues.
Chamber – The Capitol room in which a
house of Congress normally holds its sessions. The chamber of
the House of Representatives, officially called the Hall of the
House, is considerably larger than that of the Senate because
it must accommodate 435 representatives, 4 delegates, and 1 resident
commissioner. Unlike the Senate chamber, House members have no
desks or assigned seats. In both chambers, the floor slopes downward
to the well in front of the presiding officer’s raised desk.
A chamber is often referred to as the “floor”, as
when members are said to be on or going to the floor.
Chairman – The presiding officer of a
committee (including the Committee of the Whole), a subcommittee,
or a task force. At meetings, the chairman preserves order, enforces
the rules, recognizes members to speak or offer motions, and puts
questions to a vote. Senate committee chairman are invariably
selected on the basis of seniority on the committee, but they
may not chair more than one standing committee. House chairmen
are chosen by their party’s caucus or conference, usually
on the basis of seniority, and they, too, may chair only one standing
committee. Although chairmen are formally elected by their houses,
they are always the nominees of the majority party.
Classes of Senators – A class consists
of the thirty-three or thirty-four senators elected to a six-year
term in the same general election. Since the terms of approximately
one-third of the senators expire every two years, there are three
classes.
Clean Bill – After a committee has considered
and revised a bill, it may rewrite it, incorporating its amendments
into a new or “clean” bill. This bill is given a new
number and is the committee’s best judgment of the superior
sections in all versions.
Clerk of the House – An officer of the
House of Representatives responsible principally for administrative
support of the legislative process in the House. Invariably the
candidate of the majority party, the clerk is elected by resolution
at the beginning of each Congress and continues in office until
a successor is chosen.
Clerk-Hire – The personal staff to which
a member is entitled. The clerk-hire allowance is the maximum
amount of money available to a member to compensate his or her
staff. In the House, both the number of staff a member may hire
and the allowance amount are established by law or resolution.
The Senate sets no limit on the number of personal staff a senator
may hire within the limits of the allowance, but senators from
the more populous states are authorized larger sums.
Closed Hearing – A hearing closed to the
public and the press. A House committee may close its hearing
only if it determines that disclosure of the testimony to be taken
would endanger national security, violate any law, or tend to
defame, degrade, or incriminate any person. The Senate has a similar
rule.
Closed Rule – (House) Prohibits the offering
of amendments, thus requiring that the bill be accepted or rejected
as reported by committee.
Cloture – Process by which debate can
be ended in the Senate. Cloture limits further consideration of
a pending proposal to thirty hours to end a filibuster. A motion
for cloture requires 16 Senators’ signatures for introduction
and the support of two-thirds of those present and voting.
Colloquy – A formal conversational exchange
between members during floor proceedings. The device is often
used to obtain information or to put mutual understandings about
the intent of a measure, a provision, or an amendment into the
Congressional Record, thereby establishing legislative history
for the guidance of executive officials and the courts.
Comity – The practice of maintaining mutual
courtesy and civility between the two houses in their dealings
with each other and in members’ speeches on the floor.
Committee – A subdivision of the House
or Senate that prepares legislation for action by the parent chamber.
There are several types of committees. Most standing committees
are divided into subcommittees, which study legislation, hold
hearings, and report their recommendations to the full committee.
Only the full committee can report legislation for action by the
House or Senate. (See also Committee of the Whole, Conference
Committee, Joint Committee, Special Committee, Standing Committee,
Subcommittee.)
Committee Assignments – The committees
on which a member serves.
Committee Jurisdiction – The legislative
subjects and other functions assigned to a committee by rule,
precedent, resolution, or statute. A committee’s title usually
indicates the general scope of its jurisdiction, but often fails
to mention other significant subjects assigned to it. Because
each house has a relatively small number of standing committees,
many of them have immense jurisdictions, which is one reason for
the creation of numerous subcommittees.
Committee of the Whole – All members on
the floor of the House sit as one committee to consider legislation
reported by a standing committee before it goes to the floor.
The Committee of the Whole debates and amends legislation and
requires only 100 members for a quorum.
Committee on Committees – A political
party committee that assigns party members to positions on standing
committees and most select committees in its house, subject to
approval by the party organization and pro forma election by the
chamber. Ordinarily, the committee only fills vacant positions,
adhering to the custom that members should not be removed from
their assignments without their consent.
Committee Ratios – The ratios of majority
to minority party members on committees. By custom, the ratios
of most committees reflect party strength in their respective
houses as closely as possibly. In the House, however, the Appropriations,
Budget, Rules, and Ways and Means committees often have disproportionate
ratios to ensure firm majority party control.
Concur – Agree to an amendment of the
other house, either by adopting a motion to concur in that amendment
or by a motion to concur with an amendment to that amendment.
Concurrent Budget Resolution – A budget
resolution passed by both houses, but not requiring the signature
of the President. The annual budget resolution presents both fiscal
aggregates such as total budget authority, outlays and deficit,
and a subdivision of spending by functional category for the year.
May also include binding instructions on the level of savings
each committee must produce.
Concurrent Resolution – A concurrent resolution,
designated H Con Res or S Con Res, must be adopted by both houses
but is not sent to the President for signature and does not have
the force of law. A concurrent resolution is used to express the
sense of Congress on a particular issue, to serve as a vehicle
for coordinated decisions under the federal budget, or to fix
the time of adjournment.
Conference – A formal meeting or series
of meetings between members representing each house to reconcile
House and Senate differences on a measure. Also, the official
title of the organization of all Democrats or Republicans in the
Senate and of all Republicans of the House.
Conference Committee – A committee made
up of members from both chambers. Its purpose is to iron out differences
between the House and Senate versions of a bill. Members of the
conference committee are appointed by the leader of each body.
The committee must reach agreements on the provisions of the bill
(often a compromise) before it can be sent up for final floor
action in the form of a “conference report.”
Conference Report – A document submitted
to both houses that contains a conference committee’s agreements
for resolving their differences on a measure. It must be signed
by a majority of the conferees from each house and must be accompanied
by an explanatory statement. Both houses prohibit amendments to
a conference report and require it to be accepted or rejected
in its entirety.
Congress – 1) The national legislature
of the United States, consisting of the House of Representatives
and the Senate. 2) The national legislature in office during a
two-year period. Congresses are numbered sequentially; thus the
1st Congress of 1789-1791 and the 102nd Congress of 1991-1993.
Congressional Budget Office – A congressional
support agency created by the Congressional Budget and Impoundment
Control Act of 1974 to provide nonpartisan budgetary information
and analysis to Congress and its committees.
“Congressional Directory” –
The official who’s who of Congress, usually published during
the first session of a two-year Congress. Among other features,
it contains brief biographies of all members and their committee
assignments, office locations, and telephone numbers. The Directory
has been published by Congress continuously since 1821.
Congressional District – The geographical
area represented by a single member of the House of Representatives.
For states with only one representative, the entire state is a
congressional district.
“Congressional Record” – Daily
record of the proceedings and debates of the Senate and the House;
not always a verbatim account of floor debate.
Congressional Research Office – A department
of the Library of Congress whose staff provide nonpartisan, objective
analyses and information on virtually any subject to committees,
members, and staff of Congress. Established in 1917 as the Legislative
Research Service, it is the oldest congressional support agency.
Congressional Terms of Office – A term
normally begins on January 3 of the year following a general election
and runs two years for representatives and six years for senators.
Consider – To take up a measure, motion,
or matter for the purpose of acting on it.
Constitutional Rules – Constitutional
provisions that prescribe procedures for Congress.
Constitutional Votes – Constitutional
provisions that require certain votes or voting methods in specific
situations.
Contempt of Congress – Willful obstruction
of the proper functions of Congress. Most frequently, it is a
refusal to obey a subpoena to appear and testify before a committee
or to produce documents demanded by it. Such obstruction is a
misdemeanor and persons cited for contempt are subject to prosecution
in federal courts.
Continuing Appropriation – When a fiscal
year begins and Congress has not yet enacted all the regular appropriation
bills for that year, it passes a joint resolution “continuing
appropriations” for government agencies at rates generally
based on their previous year’s appropriations.
Continuing Resolution – Legislation which
extends appropriations for specific ongoing programs when the
regular appropriation has not been enacted by the beginning of
the fiscal year (October 1).
Cosponsor – A member who has joined one
or more other members to sponsor a measure.
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