1 / 14

How a Bill Becomes a Law?

How a Bill Becomes a Law?. Introduction. In the House of Reps., a bill is dropped into the “hopper” box and assigned to a committee. In the Senate, a senator submits a bill to the clerk for a reading and committee assignment. Committee Action.

reeves
Télécharger la présentation

How a Bill Becomes a Law?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How a Bill Becomes a Law?

  2. Introduction • In the House of Reps., a bill is dropped into the “hopper” box and assigned to a committee. • In the Senate, a senator submits a bill to the clerk for a reading and committee assignment.

  3. Committee Action • Bill is referred to the appropriate committee by the Speaker of the House or the presiding officer in the Senate. • 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).

  4. Committee Action • They can reject the bill immediately. • They can pigeonhole a bill. (Set it aside). • They can research and approve the bill. • They can change any and all aspects of a bill.

  5. 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. • 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.

  6. Floor Action 2. 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 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."

  7. Floor Action 3. Vote – • 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.

  8. Floor Debates • Representatives in the House have a time limitation. • Senators can filibuster a bill. (Talk it to death). • Cloture: Limit the time senators may talk. Requires a 3/5 vote.

  9. Filibuster • South Carolina Sen. John C. Calhoun used it to defend slavery in 1841. Sen. Strom Thurmond logged in the longest filibuster in US history - 24 hours and 18 minutes - as he argued against the Civil Rights Act of 1957. • A filibuster in 1841 over the firing of the Senate's official printers nearly ended in a duel. • During the civil war, filibustering Sen. Willard Saulsbury of Delaware pulled a gun on the sergeant at arms and threatened to shoot him. He didn't. • Opposing a currency bill in 1908, Wisconsin Sen. Robert La Follette sustained an all-night filibuster with glasses of milk and egg from the Senate restaurant, until he sipped the one laced with ptomaine poison. He later recovered. • Louisiana Sen. Huey Long recited recipes for oysters and scenes from the life of Frederick the Great during 15-1/2 hours of nearly continuous talking in a 1935 filibuster over the staffing of the National Recovery Administration. A sample: "First let me tell Senators what potlikker is. Potlikker is the residue that remains from the commingling, heating, and evaporation - anyway, it is in the bottom of the pot...." • In a nine-hour filibuster over judicial nominations on Nov. 19, 2003, Democratic leader Harry Reid discoursed on the virtues of wooden matches and read chapters from his own book about his hometown, "Searchlight: the Camp that Didn't Fail."

  10. Voting • Roll call: Opinion given after name is called. • Voice vote: Used on procedural issues. • Standing vote: Person stands until counted.

  11. Presidential action • Sign a bill into law. • Veto a bill (reject). • Pocket veto: Take no action for ten days. If congress is in session after ten days, the bill becomes a law. If Congress is not in session after ten days, the bill is rejected.

  12. Resolution vs. Bill • Bills • A bill is the form used for most legislation, whether permanent or temporary, general or special, public or private. A bill originating in the House of Representatives is designated by the letters "H.R.", signifying "House of Representatives", followed by a number that it retains throughout all its parliamentary stages. Bills are presented to the President for action when approved in identical form by both the House of Representatives and the Senate. • Joint Resolutions • Joint resolutions may originate either in the House of Representatives or in the Senate. There is little practical difference between a bill and a joint resolution. Both are subject to the same procedure, except for a joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution. On approval of such a resolution by two-thirds of both the House and Senate, it is sent directly to the Administrator of General Services for submission to the individual states for ratification. It is not presented to the President for approval. A joint resolution originating in the House of Representatives is designated "H.J.Res." followed by its individual number. Joint resolutions become law in the same manner as bills. • Concurrent Resolutions • Matters affecting the operations of both the House of Representatives and Senate are usually initiated by means of concurrent resolutions. A concurrent resolution originating in the House of Representatives is designated "H.Con.Res." followed by its individual number. On approval by both the House of Representatives and Senate, they are signed by the Clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate. They are not presented to the President for action. • Simple Resolutions • A matter concerning the operation of either the House of Representatives or Senate alone is initiated by a simple resolution. A resolution affecting the House of Representatives is designated "H.Res." followed by its number. They are not presented to the President for action.

  13. Help for the visual learners 

  14. Resources • Wikipedia.com • Votesmart.org

More Related