Answer:
Hello, tysm for the free points. Have a great day and stay safe! :)
So if the vice president (president of the Senate) isn’t present, the president pro tempore (senator who’s been there the longest from the majority party) will take over.
Answer:
No. In an 8-1 decision authored by Chief Justice Morrison Waite, the Court concluded that the relevant sections of the Enforcement Act lacked the necessary, limiting language to qualify as enforcement of the Fifteenth Amendment. The Chief Justice first stated that the Fifteenth Amendment "does not confer the right of suffrage upon any one," but "prevents the States, or the United States, however, from giving preference…to one citizen of the United States over another on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." In examining the language of the Enforcement Act, the Court noted that, while the first two sections of the act explicitly referred to race in criminalizing interference with the right to vote, the relevant third and fourth sections refer only to the "aforesaid" offense. According to the Court, this language does not sufficiently tailor the law to qualify as "appropriate legislation" under the Enforcement Clause of the Fifteenth Amendment.
Explanation:
The statement which describes a difference between the legislative procedures of the House of Representatives and the Senate is ''The filibuster can be used in the Senate but not in the House''
Answer: Option D
<u>Explanation:</u>
The filibuster in the United States can only be used by the senates and it cannot be used by the house of representatives. Filibuster is a method that is used by the senate of the house where the one or more than one senators can make attempt to delay a vote or block a vote on a particular bill which has been passed in the house by extending debate on that particular topic. This tactic is also only present and this power is only present with the senates and not with the house of representatives.