Government 101: How a Bill Becomes Law from votesmart.org
Schoolhouse Rock: I'm Just a Bill |
A. Legislation is Introduced
- Any member can introduce a piece of legislation
House
- Legislation is handed to the clerk of the House
or placed in the hopper.
Senate
- Members must gain recognition of the presiding
officer to announce the introduction of a bill during the morning
hour. If any senator objects, the introduction of the bill is postponed
until the next day.
·
The bill is assigned a number. (e.g. HR 1 or S 1)
·
The bill is labeled with the sponsor's name.
·
The bill is sent to the Government Printing Office (GPO) and copies are
made.
B. Committee Action
-
The bill is referred to the appropriate committee by the Speaker of the House
or the presiding officer in the Senate. Most often, the actual referral
decision is made by the House or Senate parliamentarian. Bills may be referred
to more than one committee and it may be split so that parts are sent to
different committees. The Speaker of the House may set time limits on
committees. Bills are placed on the calendar of the committee to which they
have been assigned. Failure to act on a bill is equivalent to killing it. Bills
in the House can only be released from committee without a proper
committee vote by a discharge petition
signed by a majority of the House membership (218 members).
Committee
Steps:
- · Comments about the bill's merit are requested by government agencies.
- · Bill can be assigned to subcommittee by Chairman.
- · Hearings may be held.
- · Subcommittees report their findings to the full committee.
- · Finally there is a vote by the full committee - the bill is "ordered to be reported."
A
committee will hold a "mark-up" session during which it will make
revisions and additions. If substantial amendments are made, the committee can
order the introduction of a "clean bill" which will include the
proposed amendments. This new bill will have a new number and will be sent to
the floor while the old bill is discarded. The chamber must approve, change or
reject all committee amendments before conducting a final passage vote.
After
the bill is reported, the committee staff prepares a written report explaining
why they favor the bill and why they wish to see their amendments, if any,
adopted. Committee members who oppose a bill sometimes write a dissenting
opinion in the report. The report is sent back to the whole chamber and is
placed on the calendar.
In
the House, most bills go to the Rules committee before reaching the floor. The
committee adopts rules that will govern the procedures under which the bill
will be considered by the House. A "closed rule" sets strict time
limits on debate and forbids the introduction of amendments. These rules can
have a major impact on whether the bill passes. The rules committee can be
bypassed in three ways: 1) members can move rules to be suspended (requires 2/3
vote)2) a discharge petition can be filed 3) the House can use a Calendar
Wednesday procedure.
C. Floor Action
Legislation
is placed on the Calendar
House:
Bills are placed on one of four House
Calendars. They are usually placed on the calendars in the order of which
they are reported yet they don't usually come to floor in this order - some
bills never reach the floor at all. The Speaker of the House and the Majority
Leader decide what will reach the floor and when. (Legislation can also be
brought to the floor by a discharge
petition.)
Senate:
Legislation is placed on the Legislative Calendar. There is also an Executive
calendar to deal with treaties and nominations. Scheduling of legislation is
the job of the Majority Leader. Bills can be brought to the floor whenever a
majority of the Senate chooses.
Debate
House: Debate is limited by the rules formulated in the Rules Committee. The Committee of the Whole debates and amends the bill but cannot technically pass it. Debate is guided by the Sponsoring Committee and time is divided equally between proponents and opponents. The Committee decides how much time to allot to each person. Amendments must be germane to the subject of a bill - no riders are allowed. The bill is reported back to the House (to itself) and is voted on. A quorum call is a vote to make sure that there are enough members present (218) to have a final vote. If there is not a quorum, the House will adjourn or will send the Sergeant at Arms out to round up missing members.
Senate:
debate is unlimited unless cloture is
invoked. Members can speak as long as they want and amendments need not be
germane - riders are often offered. Entire bills can therefore be offered as
amendments to other bills. Unless cloture is invoked, Senators can use a filibuster to
defeat a measure by "talking it to death."
Vote
-
the bill is voted on. If passed, it is then sent to the other chamber unless
that chamber already has a similar measure under consideration. If either
chamber does not pass the bill then it dies. If the House and Senate pass the
same bill then it is sent to the President. If the House and Senate pass
different bills they are sent to Conference Committee. Most major legislation
goes to a Conference Committee.
D. Conference Committee
Members
from each house form a conference committee and meet to work out the
differences. The committee is usually made up of senior members who are
appointed by the presiding officers of the committee that originally dealt with
the bill. The representatives from each house work to maintain their version of
the bill.
If
the Conference Committee reaches a compromise, it prepares a written conference
report, which is submitted to each chamber.
The
conference report must be approved by both the House and the Senate.
E. The President
-
the bill is sent to the President for review.
A
bill becomes law if signed by the President or if not signed within 10 days and
Congress is in session.
If
Congress adjourns before the 10 days and the President has not signed the bill
then it does not become law ("Pocket Veto.")
If
the President vetoes the bill it is sent back to Congress with a note listing
his/her reasons. The chamber that originated the legislation can attempt to
override the veto by a vote of two-thirds of those present. If the veto of the
bill is overridden in both chambers then it becomes law.
F. The Bill Becomes A Law
-
once a bill is signed by the President or his veto is overridden by both houses
it becomes a law and is assigned an official number.
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