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===U.S. Federal Government===
 
===U.S. Federal Government===
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 number decided upon in {{w|Apportionment Act of 1911|1911}} 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 non-state territories like {{w|Puerto Rico}} and the {{w|District of Columbia}}). 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.
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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 number decided upon in {{w|Apportionment Act of 1911|1911}} 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 unincorporated territories like {{w|Puerto Rico}} and the {{w|District of Columbia}}). 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.
  
 
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, he may "veto" the bill, or he may do nothing, in which case it becomes a law if and only if Congress is in session after a waiting period of 10 days (not including Sundays).
 
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, he may "veto" the bill, or he may do nothing, in which case it becomes a law if and only if Congress is in session after a waiting period of 10 days (not including Sundays).
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==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
 
{{incomplete transcript}}
 
{{incomplete transcript}}
<!--
 
 
*This transcript is neither only a representation the visible text in the small image or all of the text in the full image.
 
*This transcript is neither only a representation the visible text in the small image or all of the text in the full image.
 
*Since there is text visible all over even the small image it would be most relevant to have a full transcript.
 
*Since there is text visible all over even the small image it would be most relevant to have a full transcript.
 
**Or at least make a separate transcript page like for [[980: Money\Transcript]].
 
**Or at least make a separate transcript page like for [[980: Money\Transcript]].
 
**In the latter case this transcript below should then be reduced to only visible text in small image!
 
**In the latter case this transcript below should then be reduced to only visible text in small image!
-->
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:A history of
 
:A history of
 
:'''The United States Congress'''
 
:'''The United States Congress'''
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:HOW IDEOLOGY IS CALCULATED
 
:HOW IDEOLOGY IS CALCULATED
::Each member of Congress is assigned to an ideological category using DW-NOMINATE, a statistical system created by political scientists Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal. This system rates each member of Congress's ideological position position [sic] based on their votes.
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::Each member of Congress is assigned to an ideological category using DW-NOMINATE, a statistical system created by political scientists Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal. This system rates each member of Congress's ideological position [sic] based on their votes.
 
::DW-NOMINATE is purely mathematical and involves no judgement on the content of bills. Instead, members of Congress are placed on a spectrum based on how consistently they vote together.
 
::DW-NOMINATE is purely mathematical and involves no judgement on the content of bills. Instead, members of Congress are placed on a spectrum based on how consistently they vote together.
 
::While people argue that ideology is many-dimensional, Poole and Rosenthal found that nearly all Congressional voting behavior - especially in the modern era - can be accurately predicted by using just one ideological variable.
 
::While people argue that ideology is many-dimensional, Poole and Rosenthal found that nearly all Congressional voting behavior - especially in the modern era - can be accurately predicted by using just one ideological variable.
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==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
* The axis for the senate is mislabelled; on the right, it goes 0-10-20-30-40-50-'''40-40'''-80.
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* The axis for the senate is mislabeled; on the right, it goes 0-10-20-30-40-50-'''40-40'''-80.
* This comic used to be [https://web.archive.org/web/20211215045721/https://store.xkcd.com/products/congress-poster available as a poster] in the xkcd store before it was [[Store|shut down]].
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*A print version of this comic is available in the [https://store.xkcd.com/collections/everything/products/congress-poster xkcd store].
  
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
 
[[Category:Comics with color]]
 
[[Category:Comics with color]]
 
[[Category:Large drawings]]
 
[[Category:Large drawings]]
 
[[Category:Charts]]
 
[[Category:Charts]]
 
[[Category:Politics]]
 
[[Category:Politics]]
[[Category:Comics with xkcd store products]]
 
[[Category:Comics with lowercase text]]
 
[[Category:Comics featuring Joe Biden]]
 

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