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a lawmaking body made up of two chambers or parts
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an attempt to defeat a bill in the Senate by talking indefinitely, thus preventing the Senate from takng action on the bill |
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political districts in which candidates elected to the House of Representatives win in close elections, typically by less than 55 percent of the vote |
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districts in which incumbents win by margins of 55 percent or more |
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an alliance between Republican and conservative Democracts |
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the legislative leader elected by party members holding the majority of seats in the House or the Senate |
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the legislative leader elected by party members holding a minority of seats in the House of the Senate |
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a senator or representative who helps the party leader stay informed about what party members are thinking |
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a vote in which a majority of Democratc legislators oppose a majority of Republican legislators |
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an association of congress members created to advance a political ideology or a regional, ethnic, or economic interest |
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permanently established legislative committees that consider and are responsible for legislation within a certain subjects area |
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congressional committees appointed for a limited time and purpose |
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committees on which both senators and representatives serve |
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a joint committee appointed to resolve differences in the senate and house versions of the same bill |
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a legislative bill that deals with matters of general concern |
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a legislative bill that deals only with specific, private, personal, or local matters |
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an expression of opinion either in the house or senate to settle procedural matters in either body |
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an expression of opinion without the force of law that requires the approval of both the house and the senate but not the president |
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a formal expression of congressional opinion that must be approved by both house of congress and by the president; constitutional amendments need not be signed by the president |
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a congressional process whereby a bill may be referred to several important committees |
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a congressional process by which a speaker may send a bill to a second committee after the first is finished acting |
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a device by which any member of the house after a committee has had the bill for the thirty days, may petition to have it brought to the floor |
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an order from the house rules committee that sets a time limit on debate; forbids a bill from being amended on the floor |
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an order from the ouse rules committee that permits a bill to be amended on the floor |
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an order from the house rules committee that permits certain kinds of amendments but not others to be made into a bill on the floor |
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the minimum number of members who must be present for business to be conducted in congress |
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a roll call in either house of congress to see whether the minimum number of reps required to conduct business is present |
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a procedure to keep the senate going during a filibuster in which the disputed bill is shelved temporarily so that the senate can get on with other business |
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a congressional voting procedure in which members shout "yea" in approval or "nay" in disapproval permitting members to vote quickly or anonymously on bills |
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a congressional voting procedure in which members stand and are counted |
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a congressional voting procedure in which members pass between two tellers the "yeas" first and the "nays" second |
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a congressional voting procedure that consists of members answering "yea" or "nay" to their names |
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the ability of members to mail letters to their constituents free of charge by substituting their facsimile signature for postage |
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