A catchall thread for general US defence related topics that involve more than one US Service; USN, USMC, US Army and USCG.
I must say I still scratch my head in working out how the US form of Government actually works.The US Govt has gone into shut down because of the Senate critters could not pass the latest Budget Continuing Resolution.
www.defensenews.com/news/pentagon-congress/2018/01/20/government-shutdown-starts-saturday-after-senate-fails-to-pass-budget-bill
Me too. Here we only have the one House so it's nice and simple. It centres around confidence and supply with supply being the govts' ability to pass budgets through the House. If they can't have the Budget passed by the House, then they have lost the confidence of Parliament so the govt has to tender it's resignation to the Governor General. It's then up to the GG whether or not she will ask the main Opposition Leader if they can form a govt, or an election is called. Throughout all of this the wider govt still functions, it pays the public servants, it's bills and still collects taxes etc.I must say I still scratch my head in working out how the US form of Government actually works.
On the surface the Republicans have a majority in both houses, but still these things happen?
I know it's a difference animal here in Oz, but the party with the majority in the lower house (House of Representatives, eg, the Government), usually votes on Party lines, and then if the Government has the majority in the upper house (Senate), they also usually vote on party lines and legislation gets through.
Or if they don't have the majority in the Senate, then there is the usual horse trading with the minor parties and independents, to get legislation through.
Again, I still scratch my head!!
The US system is configured to be more deliberately adversarial than would typically be found in a parliamentary system, this has to do with the separate branches of government and separation of powers. It is also why there are separate elections for different positions, i.e. in a given even election year a person could vote for a Representative, Senator, and President, and if there are any 'third party' candidates running, each could be affiliated with a different political party.I must say I still scratch my head in working out how the US form of Government actually works.
On the surface the Republicans have a majority in both houses, but still these things happen?
I know it's a difference animal here in Oz, but the party with the majority in the lower house (House of Representatives, eg, the Government), usually votes on Party lines, and then if the Government has the majority in the upper house (Senate), they also usually vote on party lines and legislation gets through.
Or if they don't have the majority in the Senate, then there is the usual horse trading with the minor parties and independents, to get legislation through.
Again, I still scratch my head!!
Hi Tod,The US system is configured to be more deliberately adversarial than would typically be found in a parliamentary system, this has to do with the separate branches of government and separation of powers. It is also why there are separate elections for different positions, i.e. in a given even election year a person could vote for a Representative, Senator, and President, and if there are any 'third party' candidates running, each could be affiliated with a different political party.
The basic idea, and how it has more of less worked historically, is for there to be political opposition between the party controlling portions of the US Legislature and the Executive Branch, forcing the two branches of gov't to work together to come to a sort of middle ground.
As it stands now, for federal budget to pass, it needs to clear both the House and the Senate. In the Senate specifically, it needs a minimum of 60 (out of 100) votes to pass, and while there have been a small number of Democrats who voted in favour of the Senate budget, there were also roughly the same number of Republicans in the Senate who voted against it. At present it is ~10 votes short of the total needed to pass and clear the Senate. So while yes, the Republicans have a majority in both the House and the Senate, it is a slim majority.
There used to be parliamentary votes which represented these issues when the parliament reflected the demographics of the Australian society. Unfortunately, and maybe this is true in the US, the Australian parliament has descended into a swamp of political operatives and activists, on both sides, or rampant Union self interest.Hi Tod,
moral or ethical issues).
Cheers,
It actually depends on the type of bill. Most only require a simple majority (which is to say 51, but if it's 50:50 the Vice President gets a casting vote)Whilst I understood the Republicans have a majority in both houses, I didn't realise that there was a 60% (60 out of 100) requirement in the US Senate, I would have thought as long as you get to 51% that things could be passed (as it would here in Australia).
Cheers,
In the US, there are age requirements to run for certain elected positions. To run for President, one must be 35 years old, to run for a seat in the Senate, 30, and to run for House seat, 25. There are of course additional requirements like citizenship, residency.There used to be parliamentary votes which represented these issues when the parliament reflected the demographics of the Australian society. Unfortunately, and maybe this is true in the US, the Australian parliament has descended into a swamp of political operatives and activists, on both sides, or rampant Union self interest.
There should be a barrier to prevent young student or political,activists from entering the parliament before they've been employed for a reasonable period in a commercial entity other than public service whatever its stripe. Maybe then moral and ethical issues will be valued and a certain pragmatism returned to the debate.
My apologies for the rant and although this is political it's not aimed at either side of the political divide as it effect all side equally.
The Senate votes on more than just bills, confirmation of various officials being a prime example. Until recently, confirmation votes had to also reach the 60 vote minimum, but there was a parliamentary rule change so that some of the lesser positions, in the Executive Branch, could be confirmed via a simple majority vote. This change occurred because the then-minority party was blocking candidates leaving positions requiring Senate confirmation empty and the apparent reason for qualified candidates getting blocked was a desire to prevent the then-President from filling positions.It actually depends on the type of bill. Most only require a simple majority (which is to say 51, but if it's 50:50 the Vice President gets a casting vote)
Mind you, the current President has so enraged some of the Republican Senators that even a simple majority is difficult given that there are 51 Republican and 47 Democrat Senators (and two Independents who usually lean to the Democrats).
That means that calling McCain a loser and coward for being shot down and wounded then taken PoW was probably a bad move...
oldsig
2/3rds majority is a very, VERY high bar to get over for substantial and controversial bills (eg the ones that are going to get vetoed). Per Wikipedia, only 4-7% of vetoes have been overridden.what's the point of a presidential veto if congress can outvote the veto? in other words a self licking lollipop.
Indeed, particularly since a veto overrides requires a 2/3rds majority in both chambers. Given the voting demographics (out of ~200 mil. registered voters, ~45 mil. are registered as Democrats, and ~33 mil. as Republicans, so over half are not affiliated with either major party...) while majority control of the House and Senate swing back and forth between the two parties, it is not often that a party has a 2/3rds majority in a chamber. I would need to do some digging to see if a party has ever had such a majority in both chambers, and AFAIK that has never happened in modern history.2/3rds majority is a very, VERY high bar to get over for substantial and controversial bills (eg the ones that are going to get vetoed). Per Wikipedia, only 4-7% of vetoes have been overridden.