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The House of Representatives The House of Representatives

The House of Representatives - PowerPoint Presentation

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The House of Representatives - PPT Presentation

Size and Terms 435 members of the House of Representatives apportioned by Congress among the states according to state population First Congress had 65 seats Each state has at least one AK DE MT ND SD VT WY ID: 583193

district state house congress state district congress house districts members size areas constitution representatives party elected seats vote census

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Slide1

The House of RepresentativesSlide2

Size and Terms

435

members of the House of Representatives

apportioned

by Congress among the states according to state population

First

Congress had 65 seats

Each state has at least one – AK, DE, MT, ND, SD, VT, WY

Members serve a 2 year

term

unlimitedSlide3

Reapportionment

The Constitution says Congress must reapportion the seats after each

census

(10 yrs)

By 1910, there were 435 members

It was too large to be very effective

Congress didn’t do anything about it until 1929Slide4

The Reapportionment Act of 19291) “permanent” size of House is 435 (each member represents an average of 650,000 people

2) after each census, the

Census Bureau

determines how many seats each state has

3) their plan must be sent to Congress

4) if neither house rejects it within 60 days, it becomes effectiveSlide5

Elections

Since 1842, all Representatives are elected from “

single-member

” districts

Each candidate runs for a certain district within their state

State legislatures are responsible for drawing districts within their own state.

Each district must be:

Close in population size

A relatively small areaSlide6

These requirements have often been ignored by state legislators and not enforced by CongressGerrymandering

= drawing district lines to the advantage of the political party that controls the state legislature

Two forms:

1) concentrate opposition’s voters in a few districts as possible, leaving the other districts safe for the dominant

party (packing)Slide7

2) spread the opposition as thinly as possible among several districts limiting their ability to win in any

district (cracking)

Also, most state legislatures were dominated by rural areas instead of city areas so areas were carved up to give rural people more powerSlide8

Wesberry

v. Sanders

(1964) – Supreme Court said that the populations differences among Georgia’s district were so great it violated the Constitution

This reinforced the idea that populations had to be close to equal in each districtSlide9

Qualifications

The Constitution says House members:

1) must be at least 25

2) have been a US citizen for 7 years

3) must live in the state they are elected from

Custom says they must live in the district they representSlide10

The House may refuse to “seat” a member-elect by majority vote (if they don’t meet qualifications)They may punish them for “disorderly behavior”

They may expel them with a 2/3 voteSlide11

Informal qualifications (have to do with a candidate’s vote-getting abilities):Party identification

Name familiarity

Gender

Ethnicity

Political experience

The “right” combination of these can help them get elected

The “wrong” combination will help them be defeated