https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=77.245.46.86&feedformat=atomexplain xkcd - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T20:13:24ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.30.0https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php?title=1127:_Congress&diff=158381127: Congress2012-10-29T18:48:01Z<p>77.245.46.86: /* Political ideologies */</p>
<hr />
<div>{{comic<br />
| number = 1127<br />
| date = October 29, 2012<br />
| title = Congress<br />
| image = congress.png<br />
| imagesize = <br />
| titletext = It'd be great if some news network started featuring partisan hack talking heads who were all Federalists and Jacksonians, just to see how long it took us to catch on.<br />
}}<br />
<br />
Click the date above the comic to go to the xkcd page, and there is a link to the much larger version. Go find something interesting, don't worry, the wiki will still be here. <br />
<br />
==Explanation==<br />
It appears that the {{w|United States presidential election, 2012|upcoming 2012 election}} has put [[Randall]] into a political state of mind, as this is the second comic in a few weeks that has dealt with political history ([[1122: Electoral Precedent]]). As with that comic, this comic goes through the entire history of the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}. Also notably, Randall makes a number of observations that are akin to the type of observations Randall denounces in 1122 (e.g. for 1928, Randall notes that no Republican has since won the presidency without a Nixon or a Bush on the ticket).<br />
<br />
===U.S. Federal Government===<br />
In the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}, one of the {{w|Separation of powers|checks and balances}} is a {{w|bicameralism|bicameral}} {{w|United States Congress}}, which consists of two "houses": the {{w|United States Senate|Senate}}, its "upper" house; and the {{w|United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives}} ("the House"), its "lower house". The Senate consists of 2 senators elected from each state (thus 100 total), while the House consists of 435 voting representatives (a fixed number by law) whose {{w|United States congressional apportionment|apportionment}} is split between the states proportional to their population; although each state gets at least one (the House also has non-voting representatives from places like Puerto Rico and Washington D.C.). Every ten years, the House is reapportioned based on the latest census. The most populous state as of 2012 is California which has 53 seats in the House. Senators serve 6-year terms with elections held every 2 years for one-third of the seats. Members of the House (called Representatives or Congressmen/women) serve 2-year terms with all of the seats contested every 2 years.<br />
<br />
In order for a bill to become a law, it must be passed by both the House and the Senate. In a way, this theoretically ensures that the bill is supported both by the majority of states (the Senate), and the majority of the population (the House). The President may then sign the bill into law, allow it to pass into law without his signature, or he may "veto" the bill.<br />
<br />
===Political ideologies===<br />
In politics, there is a {{w|political spectrum|scale}} that represents the political beliefs of a politician. The scale goes from "{{w|Left-wing politics|left}}" to "{{w|Right-wing politics|right}}" of "center" - which generally describes a balancing point of beliefs (sometimes called "left-wing" or "right-wing").<br />
<br />
The "left" is a general belief in social justice, and is sometimes associated with {{w|socialism}} Modern left-wingers generally mandate equality, and support policies like welfare and government-subsidized healthcare. This trends toward having a larger federal government. "Liberal" is a term often used to denote left-leaning tendencies.<br />
<br />
The "right" generally believe in conserving the social and economic status quo, which is often termed {{w|conservativism|conservative}}. This trends towards having less regulation and thereby a smaller federal government. The goal is to keep the nation stable, and the wealth in the hands of those who have (made) it. This ostensibly means lower taxes, because the government does not provide as much.<br />
<br />
Politicians typically align themselves into groups of similar beliefs and positions called "parties". In the U.S., there have generally been two dominant parties (although there have been times where three or more parties have shared roughly equal influence and support. In today's politics (which is apparently known as the fifth era of political parties, or {{w|Fifth Party System}}, as noted on the outside edges of the comic) of the two current primary U.S. political parties, the {{w|Democrats}} are the left-leaning party, and the {{w|Republicans}} are the right-leaning party. The dominant parties are generally consderate "moderate" in their left- or right-wing leanings, which is by necessisty, as either party requires the support of a majority of voters to win. Smaller parties often run candidates with more extreme views, but such candidates rarely win, due to the limited number of voters whose views are at the extremes.<br />
<br />
===The comic===<br />
The comic effectively consists of three separate charts: The left- and right-hand charts are the main charts; they represent the Senate and House respectively, and purport to show the left- and right-wing leanings of each legislature through U.S. history. There is a legend on the right that sets out fairly clearly how the charts work, but basically Randall has split each wing into three levels including the very moderate or "Center" right or left, and the more extreme or "Far" right or left, as well as the average left and right, without prefix. A dotted yellow line represented the balance of power in each legislature, and white lines represent the leanings of certain notable people including presidents.<br />
<br />
Some presidents are not indicated, because they were never senators or congressmen (most of these were state Governors, such as {{w|Bill Clinton|Clinton}}, {{w|George W. Bush|Bush}} and 2012 candidate {{w|Mitt Romney}}). As may be noted from the chart, {{w|Barack Obama}} is considered "left" while {{w|Paul Ryan}} is considerd "far right". It's also notable that the "center right" ideology appears to be completely eradicated from the House and is waning in the Senate (although a similar trend is shown around 1900 with the centerists making a comeback thereafter.<br />
<br />
On either side of these charts, there are descriptions or explanations for expansions and contractions of each ideological group.<br />
<br />
The center chart appears to primarily act as a timeline. Each president is listed with their leanings indicated by a left or right arrow. Wars are shaded in grey. Other notable events are also indicated. On either side of the center chart (although somewhat mixed in with the aforementioned Senate/House explanations), there are also references to the primary parties of each era showing how they evolved (left-leaning parties on the left, and right-leaning parties on the right).<br />
<br />
Finally, there's a little extra commentary on the right side, below the legend.<br />
<br />
==Transcript==<br />
:A history of<br />
:'''The United States Congress'''<br />
:Partisan and ideological makeup<br />
<br />
{{comic discussion}}<br />
[[Category:Politics]]<br />
[[Category:Comics with color]]<br />
[[Category:Comics with charts]]<br />
[[Category:Large Drawings]]</div>77.245.46.86https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php?title=1127:_Congress&diff=158371127: Congress2012-10-29T18:45:10Z<p>77.245.46.86: /* Political ideologies */ Undoing right-wing trolling</p>
<hr />
<div>{{comic<br />
| number = 1127<br />
| date = October 29, 2012<br />
| title = Congress<br />
| image = congress.png<br />
| imagesize = <br />
| titletext = It'd be great if some news network started featuring partisan hack talking heads who were all Federalists and Jacksonians, just to see how long it took us to catch on.<br />
}}<br />
<br />
Click the date above the comic to go to the xkcd page, and there is a link to the much larger version. Go find something interesting, don't worry, the wiki will still be here. <br />
<br />
==Explanation==<br />
It appears that the {{w|United States presidential election, 2012|upcoming 2012 election}} has put [[Randall]] into a political state of mind, as this is the second comic in a few weeks that has dealt with political history ([[1122: Electoral Precedent]]). As with that comic, this comic goes through the entire history of the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}. Also notably, Randall makes a number of observations that are akin to the type of observations Randall denounces in 1122 (e.g. for 1928, Randall notes that no Republican has since won the presidency without a Nixon or a Bush on the ticket).<br />
<br />
===U.S. Federal Government===<br />
In the {{w|Federal government of the United States|U.S. Federal Government}}, one of the {{w|Separation of powers|checks and balances}} is a {{w|bicameralism|bicameral}} {{w|United States Congress}}, which consists of two "houses": the {{w|United States Senate|Senate}}, its "upper" house; and the {{w|United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives}} ("the House"), its "lower house". The Senate consists of 2 senators elected from each state (thus 100 total), while the House consists of 435 voting representatives (a fixed number by law) whose {{w|United States congressional apportionment|apportionment}} is split between the states proportional to their population; although each state gets at least one (the House also has non-voting representatives from places like Puerto Rico and Washington D.C.). Every ten years, the House is reapportioned based on the latest census. The most populous state as of 2012 is California which has 53 seats in the House. Senators serve 6-year terms with elections held every 2 years for one-third of the seats. Members of the House (called Representatives or Congressmen/women) serve 2-year terms with all of the seats contested every 2 years.<br />
<br />
In order for a bill to become a law, it must be passed by both the House and the Senate. In a way, this theoretically ensures that the bill is supported both by the majority of states (the Senate), and the majority of the population (the House). The President may then sign the bill into law, allow it to pass into law without his signature, or he may "veto" the bill.<br />
<br />
===Political ideologies===<br />
In politics, there is a {{w|political spectrum|scale}} that represents the political beliefs of a politician. The scale goes from "{{w|Left-wing politics|left}}" to "{{w|Right-wing politics|right}}" of "center" - which generally describes a balancing point of beliefs (sometimes called "left-wing" or "right-wing").<br />
<br />
The "left" is a general belief in social justice, and is sometimes associated with {{w|socialism}} Modern left-wingers generally mandate equality, and support policies like welfare and government-subsidized healthcare. This trends toward having a larger federal government. "Liberal" is a term often used to denote left-leaning tendencies.<br />
<br />
The "right" generally believe in conserving the social and economic status quo, which is often termed {{w|conservativism|conservative}}. This puts the operating power "closer-to-home" with state, or county governments making the majority of the laws, and the federal government existing to bind the smaller principalities together. The goal is to keep government small, and allow citizens to govern themselves. This ostensibly means lower taxes, because the government does not provide as much.<br />
<br />
Politicians typically align themselves into groups of similar beliefs and positions called "parties". In the U.S., there have generally been two dominant parties (although there have been times where three or more parties have shared roughly equal influence and support. In today's politics (which is apparently known as the fifth era of political parties, or {{w|Fifth Party System}}, as noted on the outside edges of the comic) of the two current primary U.S. political parties, the {{w|Democrats}} are the left-leaning party, and the {{w|Republicans}} are the right-leaning party. The dominant parties are generally consderate "moderate" in their left- or right-wing leanings, which is by necessisty, as either party requires the support of a majority of voters to win. Smaller parties often run candidates with more extreme views, but such candidates rarely win, due to the limited number of voters whose views are at the extremes.<br />
<br />
===The comic===<br />
The comic effectively consists of three separate charts: The left- and right-hand charts are the main charts; they represent the Senate and House respectively, and purport to show the left- and right-wing leanings of each legislature through U.S. history. There is a legend on the right that sets out fairly clearly how the charts work, but basically Randall has split each wing into three levels including the very moderate or "Center" right or left, and the more extreme or "Far" right or left, as well as the average left and right, without prefix. A dotted yellow line represented the balance of power in each legislature, and white lines represent the leanings of certain notable people including presidents.<br />
<br />
Some presidents are not indicated, because they were never senators or congressmen (most of these were state Governors, such as {{w|Bill Clinton|Clinton}}, {{w|George W. Bush|Bush}} and 2012 candidate {{w|Mitt Romney}}). As may be noted from the chart, {{w|Barack Obama}} is considered "left" while {{w|Paul Ryan}} is considerd "far right". It's also notable that the "center right" ideology appears to be completely eradicated from the House and is waning in the Senate (although a similar trend is shown around 1900 with the centerists making a comeback thereafter.<br />
<br />
On either side of these charts, there are descriptions or explanations for expansions and contractions of each ideological group.<br />
<br />
The center chart appears to primarily act as a timeline. Each president is listed with their leanings indicated by a left or right arrow. Wars are shaded in grey. Other notable events are also indicated. On either side of the center chart (although somewhat mixed in with the aforementioned Senate/House explanations), there are also references to the primary parties of each era showing how they evolved (left-leaning parties on the left, and right-leaning parties on the right).<br />
<br />
Finally, there's a little extra commentary on the right side, below the legend.<br />
<br />
==Transcript==<br />
:A history of<br />
:'''The United States Congress'''<br />
:Partisan and ideological makeup<br />
<br />
{{comic discussion}}<br />
[[Category:Politics]]<br />
[[Category:Comics with color]]<br />
[[Category:Comics with charts]]<br />
[[Category:Large Drawings]]</div>77.245.46.86https://www.explainxkcd.com/wiki/index.php?title=Talk:1122:_Electoral_Precedent&diff=14890Talk:1122: Electoral Precedent2012-10-18T11:39:26Z<p>77.245.46.86: </p>
<hr />
<div>My research tells me that Jefferson won 1800. Error on Randall's part? [[User:Davidy22|Davidy22]] ([[User talk:Davidy22|talk]]) 08:52, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
<br />
I'm a bit confused by 1792 vs. 1804: The latter is "No incumbent has beaten a challenger", but didn't Washington face any challenger when he was re-elected in 1792? [[User:Jolindbe|Jolindbe]] ([[User talk:Jolindbe|talk]]) 14:19, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
: {{w|United_States_presidential_election,_1792|He ran unopposed}} --[[User:Buggz|Buggz]] ([[User talk:Buggz|talk]]) 14:33, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
:: As far as I understand it, he had four opponents, but got all the votes. Then, the electoral college voted on whom to be the vice president among the remaining candidates. But it seems unlikely to get 100% of the popular votes, do I misinterpret the wiki page? [[User:Jolindbe|Jolindbe]] ([[User talk:Jolindbe|talk]]) 17:45, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
:::Well, back then, the electoral college didn't take their votes from the people. They just decided, so they decided to give Washington the presidency. [[Special:Contributions/140.247.0.79|140.247.0.79]] 18:55, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
<br />
----<br />
"1904: No one under 45 has become president. ... Roosevelt did."<br />
<br />
Sort of. {{w|Theodore Roosevelt}} (Oct 1858–1919) was under 45 when he ''became'' president, in 1901. But by the time of the ''1904'' election he was 46.<br />
<br/>[[Special:Contributions/75.36.234.236|75.36.234.236]] 18:48, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
:Correct. Theodore Roosevelt was the youngest President to date, but Kennedy was the youngest yet ''elected''. [[Special:Contributions/67.51.59.66|67.51.59.66]] 20:09, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
<br />
The image needs to be updated. I'm not sure how to do that myself. [[Special:Contributions/76.122.5.96|76.122.5.96]] 23:56, 17 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
<br />
Uploaded corrected image, changed tense on comments. Reload/refresh to check the 1800 frame should now show Jefferson... --[[User:Bpothier|B. P.]] ([[User talk:Bpothier|talk]]) 01:36, 18 October 2012 (UTC)<br />
<br />
And how can people be from Virginia AND Massachusett? I think he meant OR.[[Special:Contributions/77.245.46.86|77.245.46.86]] 11:39, 18 October 2012 (UTC)</div>77.245.46.86