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  2. Current party leaders of the United States Senate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Current_party_leaders_of...

    Republican Floor Whip: John Thune: South Dakota: Senate Minority Whip: 3. Republican Conference Chair: John Barrasso: Wyoming: Oversees floor leader election, helps lead policy initiatives and policy proposals 4. Republican Policy Committee Chair: Joni Ernst [9] Iowa: Policy liaison between committees and conference legislation 5. Republican ...

  3. Party leaders of the United States Senate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_leaders_of_the...

    When Coolidge and Hoover were president, he assisted them in passing Republican legislation. Robinson helped end government operation of Muscle Shoals, helped pass the Hoover Tariff, and stymied a Senate investigation of the Power Trust. Robinson switched his own position on a drought relief program for farmers when Hoover made a proposal for a ...

  4. Party leaders of the United States House of Representatives

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_leaders_of_the...

    These leaders are elected every two years in secret balloting of their party caucuses or conferences: the House Democratic Caucus and the House Republican Conference. Depending on which party is in power, one party leader serves as majority leader and the other as minority leader .

  5. Divided government in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divided_government_in_the...

    In the United States, divided government describes a situation in which one party controls the White House (executive branch), while another party controls one or both houses of the United States Congress (legislative branch). Divided government is seen by different groups as a benefit or as an undesirable product of the model of governance ...

  6. Republican Party (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republican_Party_(United...

    Anti-Johnson Republicans won a two-thirds majority in both chambers of Congress following the elections, which helped lead the way toward his impeachment and near ouster from office in 1868, [56] the same year Ulysses S. Grant was elected as the next Republican president. Grant was a Radical Republican, which created some division within the party.

  7. Politics of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politics_of_the_United_States

    The U.S. government being a federal government, officials are elected at the federal (national), state and local levels. All members of Congress, and the offices at the state and local levels are directly elected, but the president is elected indirectly, by an Electoral College whose electors represent their state and are elected by popular vote.

  8. Constitution of the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitution_of_the_United...

    All agreed to a republican form of government grounded in representing the people in the states. For the legislature, two issues were to be decided: how the votes were to be allocated among the states in the Congress, and how the representatives should be elected.

  9. Republicanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republicanism

    As the republican thinker and second president of the United States John Adams stated in the introduction to his famous A Defense of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America, [6] the "science of politics is the science of social happiness" and a republic is the form of government arrived at when the science of politics is ...