The Senator represents the entire state the Representative is elected in the district they live in.
m
None of the above
The Three-Fifths Compromise if i'm not mistaken. It counted slaves as 3/5 of a person when determining the amount of representatives a state received in congress (based on population)
The house of representatives and the senate make up the whole Congress. I hope you thought this was helpful :D
The king, the individual governors whole ruled the colonies, and even Parliement themselves. Since the colonists were not allowed to represent themselves per say, those who did represent them, were out for their own benefit.
Simply stated the Constitution established three branches of government: executive, legislative, and judicial. And it further divided the legislative branch into the House of Representative and the Senate. That's their proper names, which is why they are capitalized. And that's your answer. Members of the Senate are called Senators because they belong to the Senate. They are not called Representatives because they do not belong to the House of Representatives.
represents the whole/entire state
Victoria is a state and contain many electorates, hence there is no single MP for the state of Victoria. Senators on the other hand are elected to represent the whole state.
pork barrel
pork barrel
pork barrel
pork barrel
pork barrel
Because Congress reflects the wishes of the nation as a whole.
Of course, for everyone - this implies our system
Each U. S. Senator represents his/her whole state.
Members of the U. S. Congress are publicly elected by the registered voters of the areas they represent. Every Senator and seven members of the House of Representatives each represents a whole state. Every other voting member of the House represents a district within a state. U. S. House members have been publicly elected since 1789. U. S. Senators have been publicly elected since 1913.
In the presidential election, each state votes for a delegate that will represent the state in a whole and vote for the president.