u.s. political culture, u.s. political institutions september 14, 2007

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U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

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Page 1: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

U.S. Political Culture,U.S. Political Institutions

September 14, 2007

Page 2: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

The Pledge

Page 3: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Who is this?

Page 4: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Tyranny and Democracy were thought to be undesirable extremes

Page 5: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

King George III

Page 6: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

George Washington

Page 7: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Colonial Life

• Under British control for 100+ years• Property, free religion & other rights•Had about 4 million non-natives•We were “born Lockean”

Page 8: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Truth

Government

Aristocracies

Religious Institutions

The People

Page 9: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Truth

Government

Aristocracies

Religious Institutions

“We” The People

Page 10: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Rugged Individualism:“Success in life is pretty much determined by

forces outside of your control.”

• Pew Global Attitudes Survey, 44 nations, 2002.

• Nigeria: 33% “completely agree”• Nigeria: 32% “mostly or completely

disagree.”• Nigeria: ratio is 32/33 or 0.96

Page 11: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

“Success in life is pretty much determined by forces outside of your control.”

• South Africa• 24% disagree with the statement• The ratio is 24/38, or 0.63

So the general sense in South Africa is – failure is someone else’s fault.

Page 12: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

“Success in life is pretty much determined by forces outside of your control.”

• India, 14% disagree, ratio 0.39• Japan, 52% disagree, ratio 3.47• Egypt, 42% disagree, ratio 2.00• Jordan, 39% disagree, ratio 2.60• Turkey, 17% disagree, ratio 0.37• Uzbekistan, 36% disagree, ratio

1.80• China, 25% disagree, ratio 1.74

Page 13: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

“Success in life is pretty much determined by forces outside of your control.”

• Great Britain, 48% disagree, ratio 3.43• France, 44% disagree, ratio 2.32• Germany, 31% disagree, ratio 1.35• Poland, 29% disagree, ratio 1.45• Ukraine, 35% disagree, ratio 1.30• Russia, 36% disagree, ratio 2.25• United States, 65% disagree, ratio

7.22

Page 14: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

What’s the proper role of the state?

• “It is the responsibility of the (state or government) to take care of very poor people who can’t take care of themselves.”

• % Completely Agree….• Turkey, 73%• Uzbekistan, 70%• India 74%

Page 15: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

“It is the responsibility of the (state or government) to take care of very poor people

who can’t take care of themselves.”

• % completely agree• Great Britain, 59%• Germany, 45%• Poland, 59%• Ukraine, 57%• Russia, 70%• United States, 29%

Page 16: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

It’s a Small Welfare State

After All

Low spending…

Low taxes…

Page 17: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Colonial Life

•Was there an ethos of the “frontier”

• Governments most closely related to English Shires

Page 18: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

The Articles of Confederation

Shared beliefs:

Government in thehands of people Strong legislature

Articles of Confederation:

State representation No executive Weak national gov

(1781-1787)

Page 19: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Constitution

Page 20: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Constitutional Design

• Article I: Legislative

• Article II: Executive

• Article III: Judicial

• 6 other articles

• Only 8,000 words!

Page 21: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Checks & Balances(Separation of Powers)

Page 22: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

· 1 Federal Government· 50 States & the District of Colombia· Puerto Rico & 4 Insular Areas· 561 Federally-Recognized Indian Tribes

· 3034 County Governments· 13,506 School Districts· 16,504 Townships and Towns· 19,429 Municipal Governments· 35,052 “Special Districts”

Federalism in the US

Page 23: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Anyone care to guess how many people hold elected office in the United States?

Page 24: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Ohio Congressional Districts

Page 25: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Changing Locations of “Government”

• 1807

• 1907

• 2007

Page 26: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
Page 27: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Why Two Parties?

Page 28: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

U.S. Voter Turnout is Low

Page 29: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Minor Parties in U.S. History

Page 30: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Single Member DistrictsPlurality Rule

Page 31: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Grovner 27%Patterson 21%Aquino 18%Philips 14%Hartpense 11%Mackerson 9%

Page 32: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Grovner 27%

Patterson, Aquino, Mackerson48%

Philips 14%Hartpense 11%

Page 33: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Grovner, Philips, Hartpense(Party 1)

52%

Patterson, Aquino, Mackerson(Party 2)

48%

Page 34: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Denmark -- Proportional Representation

Page 35: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Ok, time for a break

• When we come back…. Quickly….– Congress– The Executive Branch– The Courts

Page 36: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
Page 37: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Two Brains

Page 38: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
Page 39: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

The Basics

• House– 435 Members

– 2 Year Terms

– Committee Dominant

– Majority Party Dominant

– 110th Congress

– Lots of Staff

• Senate– 100 Members

– 6 Year Terms

– Committees Important

– Majority Party Important

– 110th Congress

– Even More Staff

Page 40: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Representation

Representatives far more independentof party influence in the U.S. Delegate v. Trustee

States usually more heterogeneous thandistricts

Representation

Page 41: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

• How A bill Becomes a Law…. http://youtube.com/watch?v=mEJL2Uuv-oQ

http://youtube.com/watch?v=3xPXOr40XhI

Page 42: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

• Introduction & Referral• Committee Hearings• Committee Markups• Committee Reports• Schedule Floor Action (Rules, UCRs)• Floor Votes• Conference Committee• Conference Report & Floor Vote• Presidential Signature (or Veto)

How a Bill Becomes a Law

Page 43: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
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Page 45: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Committees

• Chairs based on committee seniority.

• Membership is party proportional.

• Staff dominated by majority party

• Committee Hierarchy– Exclusive– Non-Exclusive

• Appropriations vs. Authorizing

Page 46: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

The 2.6 Trillion Dollar Budget

Page 47: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
Page 48: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

The Basics

• Presidents elected to 4 year terms.

• May serve no more than 2 terms. (22nd Amendment)

• Must be a U.S. born citizen, at least 35 years old, who has lived in the U.S. for a minimum of 14 years.

Page 49: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Formal Presidential Powers

• Administrative head of government

• Commander-in-Chief of military

• Veto (or sign) legislation

• Nominate judges, cabinet secretaries

• Treaties, pardons, convene Congress

Formal Presidential Powers

Page 50: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

• May not introduce legislation (cf. prime minister)• May not declare war• Legislative oversight• Judicial review• Impeachment possible• Must use “bully pulpit” and persuasion• “Go public”

Limits on Presidential Power

Page 51: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

1. Chief of State (ceremonial)2. Chief Legislator (State of the Union)3. Chief Executive4. Opinion Leader (set national priorities)5. Chief Diplomat6. Commander in Chief7. Party Leader

Presidential Roles

Page 52: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

• Congress (Article 1, Section 8, “elastic clause.”

• States (10th Amendment -- reserves powers to the states)

• President (Inherent Powers -- largely through Congressional delegation of powers.)

Review of Various Powers

Page 53: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Presidency isMany People

EOP: OMB, NSC, CEA, “czars,” VP,and WHO

WHO: close advisors,no Senate approval

Page 54: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Civilian Employees in Cabinet Departments• Agriculture 99,045• Commerce 40,166• Defense 666,923• Education 4,343• Energy 14,850• Health and Human Services 63,627• Homeland Security 165,435• Housing and Urban Development 9,606• Interior 69,383• Justice 104,958• Labor 15,275• State 9,847• Transportation 53,420• Treasury 119,474• Veterans Affairs 235,735

Page 55: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
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The Basics

• Article 3 creates the Supreme Court, but specifics of design were left to Congress

• 9 Justices on the Supreme Court, and they may serve for life

• State & Federal Courts are Separate

• Civil and Criminal treated differently– 300,000 federal cases filed annually, 80% are

civil.

Page 57: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Current Justices

Breyer, Thomas, Ginsburg, Alito

Kennedy, Stevens, Roberts, Scalia, Souter

Page 58: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Qualifications

• Federal judges serve for life (“good behavior”)

• Chosen by president with “advice and consent”of the Senate

• No age limits or other requirements

• Size of Court? age? citizenship? education?

Page 59: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Powers

• Original jurisdiction: ambassadors, U.S. is a party, where states are the parties

• Appellate jurisdiction: all other cases (99%)(court of last resort, final interpreter)

• Judicial review?

• Lower courts to be created by Congress

Page 60: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Greatest Supreme Court power not in Constitution!

Established by Marbury v. Madison (1803)

Judicial Review has come to encompass:

– Power to declare national, state and local Laws invalid if they violate the Constitution

– Supremacy of federal laws or treaties

– Role of Supreme Court as final authority on the meaning of the Constitution

Judicial Review

Page 61: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Structure of Federal JudiciarySupreme Court

9 JusticesMostly appellate

Hears about 100out of 5,500 requests

U.S. Courts of Appeals13 districts with 170 judges

3-judge panels hear appeals33,000 cases per year

U.S. District Courts94 district courts with 650 judges

Trial courts with original jurisdiction225, 000 cases per year

Statecourts

Page 62: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

State Courts

• Each state has its own court system

• States handle 100 million cases per year

• 98% of criminal cases handled by states

Types of Cases Criminal = charged by gov for breaking law Civil = dispute between parties

Page 63: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
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How the “Constitution” Changes

• Amendments (27 of them)– Amendment is proposed by a vote of at least

2/3rds of both houses of Congress– Amendment is ratified by the legislatures of at

least 3/4ths of the states (process for 26 of 27 amendments)

• Judicial reinterpretations– Stare Decisis

Page 65: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007

Judge-Made Law

• We are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is, and the judiciary is the safeguard of our liberty and our property under the Constitution.– Chief Justice Hughes, 1907

Page 66: U.S. Political Culture, U.S. Political Institutions September 14, 2007
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U.S. Political Culture,U.S. Political Institutions

September 14, 2007