Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. Congress/Archives/2005

To do

Moved from main article page:

  1. Please add all Senators and the Congresses they were in. See article Old version of Ernest Hollings article] for an example.
  2. Create more boxes for Governors.
  3. Would like to know about possibility for adding Categories about what Congresses the Senators or Reps were in so that we can make a list for example
Category:Senators in the 108th Congress
Category:Representatives in the 108th Congress
Jack Cox 12:50, 4 October 2005 (UTC)
I disagree.
  1. Adding all Senators and the Congresses they were in will create excessive clutter. It's interesting information, but too much for the articles. See Old version of Ernest Hollings article.
  2. Governors shouldn't be included in a project regarding the U.S. Congress, as they aren't in the U.S. Congress.
  3. Categories aren't intended to be lists. See Wikipedia:Categories, lists, and series boxes.
Perhaps this could have some discussion.
--GoldRingChip 16:51, 4 October 2005 (UTC)

Dates of each session

The pages for each Congress should mention promimently when the Congress sat. I would suggest at the top of the page. Rmhermen 22:52 May 12, 2003 (UTC)

The session dates are available here. Locations are not shown, The third session of the first congress met in Phila. I believe the second session of the sixth congress first met in D.C. BobCMU76 11:41 May 14, 2003 (UTC)
This document from the Congressional Record lists Congresses, sessions, dates of convening and adjournment, length (in days), President Pro Tem, and Speaker through the convening of Congress in January 2003. It states that Congress met for the first and second sessions of the First Congress (1789 and 1790) in New York City, from the third session of the First Congress through the first session of the Sixth Congress (1790 to 1800) in Philadelphia, and, since the second session of the Sixth Congress (1800), in Washington DC. As an aside, I think using numerals rather than spelled-out numbers (107th Congress, not One Hundred Seventh Congress) would be far easier to read (with redirects based on the spelled-out versions), and also would reflect longstanding practice. This style is used by both houses of Congress. OtherDave 13:06, 10 August 2005 (UTC)
I've assigned myself the task of adding the dates for each session of Congress, along with the location, to each individual Congress's page, using the format I found at the First Congress as an example. I noted on the page for the Sixth that it was the first to have a session in Washington, and on the page for the Seventh that it was the first to meet 'only' in Washington. For subsequent Congresses I will simply include Washington as the location. OtherDave 22:50, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

Congressional districts

Not sure if anyone is still watching this project or not. I'd like to start making articles about Michigan's congressional districts, describing some history and listing representatives from the districts. If possible, I'd like to get maps showing the area represented after each redistricting (although that would require some digging). I'm just wondering if anyone has already tried anything similar and I'm also looking for naming suggestions. I was thinking of First Congressional District of Michigan, but I see there are some other variations under Category:U.S. Congressional districts. Such as North Carolina congressional districts (only lists current districts), United States House of Representatives, Texas District 1, 1st Congressional District of Kansas and First Congressional District of Hawaii. Personally, I think the last naming form is clearest, but curious if anyone else has thoughts about this. olderwiser 19:49, Feb 9, 2005 (UTC)

Ordinal number first has my vote, for what that's worth (10th Congressional District of Maryland). I think it's easier to read in a list than the spelled-out version would be (Twenty-ninth vs 29th). I just looked at the web pages for 20 House members; roughly 3 in 4 use the equivalent of "3rd" rather than "third" on the home page; at least one of those who spell out the name also uses the numeral elsewhere on the member's site -- "Congressman Wombat of the Ninth District... voters in the 9th District." OtherDave 13:06, 10 August 2005 (UTC)
The articles that exist are formatted:
[[United States House of Representatives, {{{State}}} District {{{number}}}]].

For example,

United States House of Representatives, California District 48

If there is only one district, then District {{{number}}} changes to At Large.

For example,

United States House of Representatives, Alaska At Large

See List of United States Congressional districts for a complete list of all current and obsolete districts.

--GoldRingChip

North Carolina Congressional Districts

I just reorganized North Carolina Congressional Districts, using a gallery for the maps of the districts and using gallery captions to replace the auto-generated TOC. I also put icons representing the party of each district's officeholder. I think the result improves upon its predecessor in a couple of ways and hope you take it into account for any style guidelines you follow.

BTW, I would have expected the article's title to be North Carolina congressional districts, which would better follow Wikipedia:Naming conventions#Lowercase second and subsequent words. 66.167.252.174 22:25, 20 November 2005 (UTC).

I noticed GoldRingChip (talk · contribs) was apparently unhappy with the reorganization, and instead of explaining why (either here or at Talk:North Carolina Congressional Districts), he all but reverted them entirely. Since GoldRingChip (talk · contribs) is a member of this project, I hope he explains here why he felt that was necessary. 66.167.252.20 07:48, 22 November 2005 (UTC).
Here are my thoughts on the article, North Carolina Congressional Districts.
-- GoldRingChip (talk · contribs · logs) 14:46, 22 November 2005 (UTC).
I have no issue with your first two changes, but I would like to discuss the changes made for performance reasons. After doing a little bit of math, I think the version you've introduced is slower than the one you replaced. That's because the thumbnails you introduced are 2-3 times the size of the ones used in the gallery, which more than makes up for the overhead due to the party icons, which, since there are only two of them, are pretty fast, with or without the m:November 2005 image server on wheels. To compare, view the version current as of this comment with the gallery-based version. Both are faster than the immediately previous version, which had 13 ~120K district maps. I think it's safe to say that judged based on performance, the gallery-based TOC is preferable.
Style judgments are admittedly more subjective. I favor the gallery-based TOC because the uncustomized standard TOC makes the article longer and leaves significant whitespace at the top. W.r.t. party icons, I find them worth their minimal cost because they provide an at-a-glance sense of the delegation's dominant political party. They are redundant but communicate more quickly than having to read the corresponding text. A similar re-inforcing technique is used in Monobook, for example in its use of the user icon.
For these reasons, I propose combining your other contributions with the gallery-based TOC and party icons. 66.167.138.98 07:21, 23 November 2005 (UTC).
Are you the same person as the other unsigned (& un-loggged in) commentators, above? --GoldRingChip (t·c) 00:47, 24 November 2005 (UTC)

Seventy-first United States Congress?

Is this article correct? Seventy-first United States Congress? It doesn't look right. Can someone working on this project please fix it? thanks :) Kingturtle 07:17, 15 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Can you be more specific? I went to the page and added dates for all three sessions, a little project I've assigned myself (dates from the Congressional Record). I did not try to verify names of leaders, though I see the page does not mention President Pro Tem of the Senate (as opposed to the majority leader). OtherDave 14:12, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

i could help this project

i saw the congress pages on the most linked to and nonexistant wikipages list, so i added to the 91st United States Congress and created the 90th United States Congress. all i planned on doing (for now) was copying, pasting, and wiki'ng info from house.gov. then i saw that there was a project for these pages. with "your" OK, i will continue to do so for the remaining missing congress pages, and formatting to any style that you planned on using.
- Somedude 01:41, 2005 Mar 25 (UTC)

Following Somedude's lead, I've been putting specific dates for sessions (see note above). OtherDave 22:50, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

Thomas Project

I think you should have every page link to the Thomas Project ([1]) where possible. This is a service of Congress has lists of all Bills passed by each Congress since the 93rd (e.g. [2] etc).Chris Martin 16:46, 21 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Looks bad

I SPENT HOURS ON THOSE SENATE LISTS AND I HAVE IT MESSED UP! I HAVE SAID TIME AND TIME AGAIN THAT IF YOU MESS WITH THOSE LISTS IT LOOKS LIKE CRAP! AND IT DOES LOOK LIKE CRAP, It does not look neat! --Jack Cox 21:08, 1 September 2005 (UTC)

You are so... right. Yeah. I messed them up. Sorry. They do look bad.
So I've since tried to clean them up.
* I put in "nowrap"s in the columns,
* I eliminated the (D), (R), (I) abbreviations because they take up unnecessary space since the colors already indicate party
* Changed "Members of the XXXth Congress" to "United States Senators in the XXXth Congress" because the Senate is a continuous body unlike the House.
I made these changes to the 105th through 109th("Current") templates for your perusal.
What do you think?
--GoldRingChip 00:42, 2 September 2005 (UTC)
Bless you for using cellpadding! I have been working through the individual Congresses, adding session dates and adding or adjusting the previous/next navigation (the one at the bottom of the page, under External Links), giving it cellpadding of 6. Re Senators: while I agree the Senate is a continuous body in that the terms of office for its members extend through three congresses, the Senate is a part of Congress and thus subordinate to the entity as a whole. Senator Byrd of W. Va., for example, is very much a member of the 109th Congress, as he was of the 108th, 107th, 106th, etc., etc. So I'd go for the simpler "Members of the XXth Congress" label for both houses. OtherDave 22:55, September 8, 2005 (UTC)

Categories

The use of the 'catch all' category Members of the U.S. House of Representatives for individual members is just not workable. There is some work that is breaking former members out by state. And there are two forms in use: U.S. Representatives from Missouri and Members of the U.S. House from Maryland. We ought to strive for some consistency. So, just edit the proposal, and add any comments after it. Thanks, Lou I 12:30, 5 September 2005 (UTC)

Done!

Category:Members of the U.S. House of Representatives is cleared out of individual reps. They are all now in their respecitve state-specific categories. For some reason, only last names starting with M and S where there. Fplay 01:56, 9 December 2005 (UTC)

Proposed categories

  1. Each state should hacve a category for current and former House members, in the form of U.S. Representatives from Statename. Each category should have a parent category entry of [[Category:Members of the U.S. House of Representatives| ]].
  2. An additional category should be reserved and used for current house members, such as U.S. House Members

discussion

House

The use of a blank in the parent category entry will force all 'subcategories' to the first page of the now massive Members. Once we get the list down to a workable size (none), we cabn reinsert the state names to get headings/toc entries. Lou I 12:30, 5 September 2005 (UTC)

I think U.S. Representatives from State goes better with U.S. Senators from State, as many senators were also representatives at one point. --tomf688<TALK> 00:11, September 8, 2005 (UTC)

Senate

We could continue a single category for the members of the U.S. Senate. The list is not so large as to make this unworkable, but I prefer the Category:U.S. Senators from Foo by state. Lou I 12:30, 5 September 2005 (UTC)

Both

People will want to view these things several ways: members of either body by party (especially after the 25th Congress or so), members by State (= state delegations). Is there an option for some sort of database from which the information can be pulled? If so, then the "XXth Congress" page could have links for "House membership by state" (with parties indicated), "House membership by party" (with state indicated). It seems counterproductive to clutter up the "Congress page" with a huge list of names when the accomplishments (or failures) of the Congress are more pertinent, as long as there's an easy way to find out who the participants/culprits were. The 108th Congress has four lines for legislation out of info that 'print preview' says would chew up 28 pages. Isn't this what hyperlinks are all about? Or am I misundestanding something? OtherDave 22:55, September 8, 2005 (UTC)

Removing the list to its own article make sense.What does anyone else think? Lou I 12:22, 27 September 2005 (UTC)

Individual Member Categories

Current use of categories for individual members:

  • The votes from CFD and renaming is now completed for [[Category:United States Senators from Foo]]. The U.S. Representatives category vote failed to reach consensus in any particular version of category name.
  • I have created a sample of a category heading for House members, at Category:U.S. Representatives from Kentucky. Please comment or edit it. After a pause for comments, I plan to duplicate this across the states, and for the senators as well.
  • Thinking about this also raised a question about the delegations articles. In the current use most states have two articles: the U.S. Congressional Delegations from Kentucky and the List of United States Senators from Kentucky. I'd like to suggest that we remove sanators from the delegation detail, leaving a note and link to the Senate list in the house (delegations) article.
  • U.S. Congressional Delegations from New York has a Senate section that uses a column form to present both 'Classes' of Senator in a single table. I'd also like to suggest that our List of Senators from xx use a similar format, but with the congress and dates link first, then the two classes as the second and third column. Comments?
  • If we do this, what about the few articles like List of United States Senators from Delaware that contain aditional information?
  • There are also a couple of clean up details, such as List of United States Senators from Kansas, which is a redirect to the delegations page.
  • In the wishful thinking department, I wish I could think of a better way to present the table of representatives by date/district some way that didn't scroll off the page to the right. Maybe something like a spreadsheet that keeps the first (date) column but hides the next 10, letting me see districts 11-15. Any suggestions are welcome...
  • After the pause for comments, I'll add a summary of the layout for individual member usage to the project page.

Thanks for your consideration, and intersperse comments above, or use my talk page Lou I 17:18, 16 October 2005 (UTC) talk

=Lists of Senators

I've modified the List of United States Senators from Texas as an example of the format I'd like to follow. The toughest part of this activity is the footnotes. My next target is Pennsylvania since it covers all Congresses. If anyone has comments let me know. I've also compiled a color and link schema from several of these articles, described below. Comments are welcome, but if you get them in early I can incorporate any improvements in this pass. Lou I 21:45, 30 October 2005 (UTC)

That's excellent. The format and the footnotes make sense. But it can be definitely hard work to collect that information at one time. Tfine80 21:49, 30 October 2005 (UTC)

Party color codes in lists

Several lists of senators, delegations, and other politicians use color coding to show political parties. This table shows the most widely used colors, but they're not universal. (See the Texas Senator list linked above for an example.) After a pause for comments, I'll put this or a list improved by comments on the project page. Also, any suggestions on a color code for anti-federalist? Lou I 22:13, 30 October 2005 (UTC)

How about a Lilac or Light Cyan for the anti-federalists? Lilac seems to be the best contrast to the others, while a light Cyan retains a consistancy with the democratic-republican party that would follow it. I think the Light Cyan works best for that reason. --Barberio 15:19, 22 November 2005 (UTC)



colorpartyparty link code
CCCCCCHeading
DDEEFFdemocrat (D) [[Democratic Party (United States)|(D)]]
FFE8E8republican (R) [[Republican Party (United States)|(R)]]
CCFFCCdemocratic-republican (D-R) [[Democratic-Republican Party (United States)|(D-R)]]
AAFFAAnational-republican (N-R) [[National-Republican Party (United States)|(N-R)]]
FFFFCCwhig (Whig) [[Whig Party (United States)|(Whig)]]
E6E6AAfederalist (F) [[Federalist Party (United States)|(F)]]
E8FFE8anti-federalist (A-F) [[Anti-Federalism|(A-F)]]

Another table


Political Party Hex Code
Federalist bgcolor=#E6E6AA
Democratic-Republican bgcolor=#CCFFCC
National Republican bgcolor=#FFF8DC
Democratic bgcolor=#DDEEFF
Know-Nothing bgcolor=#CCFFFF
Whig bgcolor=#FFFFCC
Republican bgcolor=#FFE8E8
Misc.* bgcolor=#FFFFFF
Territorial bgcolor=#ffdead

* Misc. = No party, indepedent, military, provisional, minor third party

Here's the table I've been referring to. Note the descrepancy under National Republican. jengod 19:37, 27 November 2005 (UTC)

Advice?

Hiya, I need opinions on how I've been doing on expanding the Seventy-third United States Congress. Still some technically tweaking needed, but I think it's about as complete as it will be. I feel the need to create a template with all the Congresses listed on it (since it's hard to navigate between them as it is right now). I'd be willing to make such a template, if it's a good idea? Also, I am expanding the [[U.S. Congressional Delegations from <state>]] pages that have gaps before the 73rd Congress. I've already done so for U.S. Congressional Delegations from New Hampshire, U.S. Congressional Delegations from Mississippi, U.S. Congressional Delegations from Iowa, and U.S. Congressional Delegations from Rhode Island. Finally, I would like an opinion on United States House of Representatives, New Mexico District 1. There wasn't a clear example on those Congressional District pages (since there were so few of those pages) so I thought what I did (which was slightly based on Kansas') was presentable. But I would like a second opinion! YourNickname 22:43, 2 November 2005 (UTC)

Finding a Congress - About the querstion of a navigation template... I don't think we need one, we now have two ways: the List of United States Congresses and the category Category:United States Congress by session which is easier to navigate. I use the category since it's link is already at the bottom of each article. (More comments later)... Lou I 00:04, 3 November 2005 (UTC)

Congressional Lists (was Congressional Trivia Lists)

There are a lot of Presidential Trivia Lists, are there any Congressional trivia lists?

I am about to create a list of Congressional delegations ranked by partisan composition, which will be similar to the chart I created here.

Surely there are other trivia lists that I have overlooked. Articles about women members, African American members, and Asian members etc. could be included in a new Congressional Lists template. Anyone have some good suggestions on how to proceed? NoSeptember 23:05, 6 November 2005 (UTC)

I created the new article Partisan mix of congressional delegations. NoSeptember 14:49, 8 November 2005 (UTC)

I created Template:Congresslists, I welcome improvements (I'm sure I have not found all the articles that should be included). NoSeptember 13:20, 9 November 2005 (UTC)

Great! I've edited it a little. I think it should be a general navigation box, not just trivia lists. What do you think? --GoldRingChip 19:25, 9 November 2005 (UTC)
Looks good, and you are right that "trivia" was really not the right term. We needed a congressional list template and it could be so much more; I hope it grows into something similar to the potuslists template. NoSeptember 08:42, 10 November 2005 (UTC)

Individual members

Peter G. Gerry

Please take a look at Peter G. Gerry. This was on the requested articles list, it had 20 something links but no article. I had troubles with the infobox and need to add in preceeded by and succeeded by. But, it is coming along, and help is welcome. I also started a topic for his wife and added it to DYK. Joaquin Murietta 01:05, 11 November 2005 (UTC)

Joseph McCarthy

Peer review has been requested for the Joseph McCarthy article. Please make all peer review comments at Wikipedia:Peer review/Joseph McCarthy/archive1. TomerTALK 20:29, 1 December 2005 (UTC)

Acts

Would this be the place to discuss USA PATRIOT Act? I'm trying to get it up to scratch - it's a slow process. - Ta bu shi da yu 16:46, 19 November 2005 (UTC)

Collaboration Of The Week

Is there any interest in regularly having a U.S. Congress Collaboration of the week?

Don't discuss it here on [[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. Congress]]. I've created a subpage for discussion and (if merited) creation: Wikipedia:WikiProject U.S. Congress/COTW. --GoldRingChip 16:55, 19 December 2005 (UTC)


Senate prez. pro tem

NOTE: I've been adding templating to former Senate pro tems, just so you all know. Staxringold 01:08, 22 October 2005 (UTC)