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1.
Who are these people? Why are they color-coded they way they are?
The blue characters represent the Democrats and the red characters are the Republicans. The
color scheme originates from Great Britains political system.
2.
Who are these people? What happens if you mouse over them? What happens if you click on
one?
These people are sponsors who promote a bill. If you mouse over them, it reveals their name,
ideology score, and state. If you click them, it highlights are the bills they are a part of.
3.
What are all the blue and red dots all over the screen?
Those dots are bills.
4.
The Senate can pass things via Unanimous Consent. What does that mean in common, ordinary
English? (Note: A copy/paste job is no good here...how would you explain it to someone that
doesnt understand anything about our government).
Unanimous consent is an agreement amongst all members on anything that requires a yes or no
decision.
6.
Whats the difference between a Congressional Resolution and a Bill/Law? Does Congress
generally pass more resolutions or laws?
Replace this text with your answer.
7.
What is Conference Committee? Why do some bills pass through Conference Committee and
some bills dont?
Replace this text with your answer.
8.
Whats your general observation about the number of bills that are introduced vs. the number of
bills that become law?
Replace this text with your answer.
Mouse over the bills that became laws. Click on one that interests you. Youll
notice bills either start with HR for House or S for Senate. The number is the
# of bill that was introduced during that Congress (so...the very first bill
introduced to the House would be HR 1, the second HR 2, and so on...)
Click on the underlined name of the bill. This will open a new tab at Congress.gov.
Read the summary. What was the bill about?
Replace this text with your answer.
The 113th Congress has a reputation of a Do-Nothing Congress. Find a Congress earlier in history
(perhaps one that had the same party controlled both the HR and S) and compare the stats at the
bottom of the page.
House
Senate