bicameral
(adjective)
Having, or pertaining to, two separate legislative chambers or houses.
Examples of bicameral in the following topics:
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Bicameralism
- Bicameralism is the practice of having two legislative or parliamentary chambers.
- Bicameralism is an essential and defining feature of the classical notion of mixed government.
- Bicameral legislatures tend to require a concurrent majority to pass legislation.
- The Founding Fathers of the United States favored a bicameral legislature.
- Describe bicameralism and the Founding Fathers' understanding of its role in American federalism
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Constitutional Issues and Compromises
- The Virginia Plan was a proposal by Virginia delegates for a bicameral legislative branch .
- There was to be a bicameral legislature made up of a Senate and a House of Delegates.
- The plan featured a bicameral legislature, the lower house elected by the people for three years.
- The Pinckney Plan proposed a bicameral legislature made up of a Senate and a House of Delegates.
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A New Constitution
- Delegates also accepted the need for either a unicameral (one-house) or a bicameral (two-house) legislature.
- This plan also proposed a bicameral legislature.
- However, the Connecticut Compromise proposed by Roger Sherman outlined a system of bicameral legislation that included both proportional and equal representation.
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The Structure of the Government
- Delegates largely accepted without dispute the need for a bicameral (two-house) legislature, similar to the British Parliament.
- However, since the United States had no natural aristocracy (no equivalent to a "House of Lords") they were uncertain as to the character of an American bicameral representative body.
- However, the "Connecticut Compromise" (more popularly known as the "Great Compromise") proposed by Roger Sherman outlined a system of bicameral legislation that included both proportional and equal representation.
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The Powers of State Government
- Every state except for Nebraska has a bicameral legislature, comprised of two chambers.
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The Caucus
- There can also be smaller caucuses in a legislative body, including those that are multi-partisan or bicameral.
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Decisions, Decisions!
- Which is the better way to arrange a legislature, unicameral or bicameral?
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The Virginia and New Jersey Plans
- The Virginia Plan proposed a legislative branch consisting of two chambers (bicameral legislature).
- Perhaps the most important of these was introduced by the Connecticut Compromise, which established a bicameral legislature with the U.S.
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Amending the Constitution
- It called for a bicameral legislature along with proportional representation in the lower house, but required the upper house to be weighted equally between the states.This agreement led to the Three-Fifths Compromise, which meant less populous Southern states were allowed to count three-fifths of all non-free people toward population counts and allocations.
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The Powers of National Government
- It is bicameral, comprised of the Senate and the House of Representatives.