njohnson605
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- Jun 3, 2010
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The question is in the title. This will get me a bonus point in class.
Please help me out, fellas.
Please help me out, fellas.
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Congress was created before there were leap years. This created a flux in the time epochs which resulted in Congress experiencing an additional transition period. It will resolve itself in the next 1000 years.
What the heck??I suppose that depends on which house of Congress we are talking about.
I know back in 2001, we had a second transition in the Senate because of Senator Jeffords, switching from Republican to Independent and caucusing with the Democrats which resulted in control transfering from Republican to Democrat.
Other than that, I have no clue unless they are counting the Congress under the Articles of Confederation, which im not terribly familiar with.
What the heck??I suppose that depends on which house of Congress we are talking about.
I know back in 2001, we had a second transition in the Senate because of Senator Jeffords, switching from Republican to Independent and caucusing with the Democrats which resulted in control transfering from Republican to Democrat.
Other than that, I have no clue unless they are counting the Congress under the Articles of Confederation, which im not terribly familiar with.
You think a switch in parties alters the Congress session??
No. It's not. Not in regards to the Congressional Sessions.What the heck??I suppose that depends on which house of Congress we are talking about.
I know back in 2001, we had a second transition in the Senate because of Senator Jeffords, switching from Republican to Independent and caucusing with the Democrats which resulted in control transfering from Republican to Democrat.
Other than that, I have no clue unless they are counting the Congress under the Articles of Confederation, which im not terribly familiar with.
You think a switch in parties alters the Congress session??
It's a transition in government genius.