Congressional Leadership: Crash Course Government and Politics #8 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Hi, I'm Craig and this is Crash Course Government and Politics, and today we're going to examine
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the leadership structure of Congress! I know, pretty exciting stuff! Now calm down, let me explain.
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[Theme Music]
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Are you ready to talk about Congressional leadership? You better be.
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So, the Congressional leadership are the Congresspersons with titles like Majority Leader
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and Minority Whip, and they have a lot to do with political parties, so we're going to talk about
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what the political parties do in Congress as well. Even if you don't follow politics, you probably
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have heard of the name and titles, if not the functions, of the various leaders. I'm
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going to need some help on this one, so... Let's go the Clone Zone!
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In the Clone Zone today I've got House Clone and Senate Clone to help me explain Congressional
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leadership. House Clone in the house! Take it away.
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The leader of the House of Representatives is the Speaker of the House, and he or she
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is the third most powerful person in the country. The speaker is always elected by whichever
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party is in the majority. These elections take place every two years, because the whole
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House is elected every two years. That's a lot of elections! At the time of the shooting
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of the episode the Speaker of the House is John Boehner from Ohio, known for his tan, tears, and tacos.
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Yeaah, he's oddly really good at making tacos. I had the barbecue pork at his house one time....
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Yeah, I had the beef taco! He called it la lengua. Interesting choice.
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Yeah. The speaker has two assistants to help run the house. The Majority Whip has the primary
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task of counting votes on important pieces of legislation, and making the party members
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vote along with their party. Whipping them into line, I suppose. (whipping noise)
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The third in line is the House Majority Leader, who helps the majority and probably does other
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stuff, but mainly he's chosen by the speaker because he's popular with particular factions
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within the party. The Minority Party, that's the one with fewer members elected in a term,
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duh (scoffs), also has a Minority Leader, and a Minority Whip, but no speaker. The Minority
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Leader is the de facto spokesperson for the minority party in the House, which is why you often see him or
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her on TV, or on your phone, or, your iPad, or your pager. I don't think you can see it on your pager.
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Hey, that was some pretty good stuff you said there House Clone.
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What's the deal with the Senate, Senate Clone?
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Things are simpler over in the Senate because we have only 100 august members and not the
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rabble of 435 to try to "manage." The leader of the Senate is the Majority Leader and he
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(so far it's always been a he) is elected by the members of his party, which by definition
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is the majority party, the one with 51 or more members. There's also a Minority Leader,
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which, like the Minority Leader in the House, is the party's spokesperson. The Vice President
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presides over the Senate sessions when he doesn't have anything better to do, even though
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it's one of his few official constitutional duties. When the veep is off at a funeral,
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or undermining the president with one of his gaffes, the President pro tempore presides.
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The President pro tem is a largely ceremonial role that is given to the most senior member
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of the majority party. Senior here means longest serving, not necessarily oldest, although
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it can be the same thing. No one would want to be a Congressional leader if there was
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no power involved, so it's important to know what powers these folks have, and how they
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exercise them. Also, I'm not supposed to do this, but let's go to the Thought Bubble.
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I love saying that!
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The primary way that leaders in both the House and Senate exercise power is through committee
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assignments. By assigning certain members to certain committees, the leadership can
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ensure that their views will be represented on those committees. Also, leaders can reward
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members with good committee assignments, usually ones that allow members to connect with their
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constituents, or stay in the public eye, or punish wayward members with bad committee
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assignments. Like the committee for cleaning the toilets or something. The Speaker of the
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House is especially powerful in his role assigning Congressmen to committees.
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Congressional leaders shape the agenda of Congress, having a huge say in which issues
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get discussed and how that discussion takes place. The Speaker is very influential here,
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although how debate happens in the House is actually decided by the House Rules Committee,
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which makes this a rather powerful committee to be on. The Senate doesn't have a rules
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committee, so there's no rules! Aw, yeah! There's rules. The body as a whole decides
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how long debate will go on, and whether amendments will be allowed, but the Majority Leader,
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if he can control his party, still has a lot of say in what issues will get discussed.
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Agenda setting is often a negative power, which means that it is exercised by keeping
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items off the agenda rather than putting them on. It's much easier to keep something from
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being debated at all than to manage the debate once it's started, and it's also rather difficult
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for the media to discuss an issue that's never brought up, no matter how much the public
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might ask, "But why don't you talk about this thing that matters a lot to me?" Thanks, Thought Bubble.
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Speaking of the media, Congressional leaders can also wield power because they have greater
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access to the press and especially TV. That's the thing people used to watch. Instead of YouTube.
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This is largely a matter of efficiency. Media outlets have only so many reporters, and they
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aren't going to waste resources on the first-term Congressman from some district in upstate
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New York. No one even goes to upstate New York. Is there anyone in upstate New York?
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Has anyone ever gone to upstate New York?
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When the Speaker calls a press conference reporters show up, and the Majority Leader can usually
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get on the Sunday talk shows if he wants. Media access is a pretty handy way to set an agenda for the public.
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Finally, Congressional leaders exercise a lot of power through their ability to raise
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money and to funnel it into their colleague's campaign. I want colleagues like that. Each
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House of Congress has a special campaign committee and whoever chairs it has the ability to shift
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campaign funds to the race that needs it most, or to the Congressperson he or she most wants
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to influence. The official leadership has little trouble raising money since donors
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want to give to proven winners who have a lot of power, and get the most bang for their
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buck. Since the leaders usually win their races easily, this is more true in the House
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than the Senate. They frequently have extra campaign money to give. Often the donations
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are given to political action committees, or PACs, which we'll talk about in another episode.
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We're going to spend a lot of time talking about political parties, and probably having
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parties of our own in later episodes, especially their role in elections, but they are really
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important once Congress is in office too. One way that parties matter is incredibly
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obvious if you stop to think about it. It's contained in the phrase "majority rules."
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This is especially true in the House, where the majority party chooses the Speaker, but
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it's also the case in the Senate. This is why ultimately political parties organize
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and raise so much money to win elections: if one of the parties controls both houses and the presidency,
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as the Democrats did in 2008 through 2009, that party is much more likely to actually get things done.
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The party that's the majority in each house is also the majority on all of that house's
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committees, or at least the important ones, and, as we saw in the last episode, committees
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are where most of the legislative work in Congress gets done. Gets did. As you probably
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figured out, the majority party chooses the committee chairs, too, so it's really got
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a lock on that sweet legislative agenda. Parties also can make Congress more efficient by providing
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a framework for cooperation. The party provides a common set of values, so a Republican from
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Florida and one from Wyoming will have something in common, even if their constituents don't.
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These common values can be the basis of legislation. Sometimes.
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But sometimes -- [punches eagle] -- that happens.
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Political parties also provide discipline in the process. When a party is more unified
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it's easier for the leader to set an agenda and get the membership to stick to it. Right? Unified.
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Lack of party unity can make it difficult for the leadership. In 2011 a large group
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of very conservative newbie Congressmen associated with the Tea Party Movement made it difficult
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for Speaker Boehner to put forward an agenda.
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The Tea Party caucus felt Boehner compromised too much with the Democrats, even though his
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agenda was, by some standards, pretty conservative. As a result, Congress wasn't able to get much
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done, except make itself unpopular.
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So, if you combine all this with the stuff we learned about Congressional committees,
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you should have a pretty good understanding of how Congress actually works. Yay! Understanding!
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As this course progresses and you fall in love with politics, and myself, be on the
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lookout for how the leadership sets the agenda and pay attention to what issues might be
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floating around that aren't getting discussed in Congress.
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Understanding who the Congressional leaders are, and knowing their motivations, can give
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you a sense of why things do and don't get done by the government. And, if you're lucky,
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you live in a district represented by a member of leadership. In that case, the person you
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vote for will be in the news all the time, which is kind of satisfying, I guess.
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Yeah, I voted for that guy! Yeah! And now he's on the TV! Yeah!
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Thanks for watching. We'll see you next week. What do you think, can we be unified?
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Can we get things done? We can't.
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Crash Course Government and Politics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support
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for Crash Course US Government comes from Voqal. Voqal supports non-profits that use
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technology and media to advance social equity. Learn more about their mission and initiatives
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at voqal.org. Crash Course was made by all of these nice people.
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Thanks for watching.
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Someday, maybe the eagle and I will get along.
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Not today. Not today.