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How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students! But ONLY a member of the HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES or SENATE can sponsor a bill.
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How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

Jan 14, 2016

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Hubert Doyle
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Page 1: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

How A Bill Becomes A LawThe idea for a bill can come from ANYONE: regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

But ONLY a member of the HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES or SENATE can sponsor a bill.

Page 2: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

1 A bill is introduced into the H.O.R. or Senate and given a title and a number.

2 Then it is referred to a committee that specializes in that particular area. The committee may simply ignore the bill and let it “DIE” or . . .

3 The committee will then hold hearings. It does this to gather information about the bill.

Page 3: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

1 A bill is introduced into the H.O.R. or Senate and given a title and a number.

2 Then it is referred to a committee that specializes in that particular area. The committee may simply ignore the bill and let it “DIE” or . . .

3 The committee will then hold hearings. It does this to gather information about the bill.

4 The committee may approve the bill as is, rewrite it, or KILL the bill. If approved, it goes to the FULL house (H.O.R/Senate).

H.O.R.: Rules committee sets rules for debates and amendments on the bill.

It also schedules when the debates will occur.

Page 4: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

1 A bill is introduced into the H.O.R. or Senate and given a title and a number.

2 Then it is referred to a committee that specializes in that particular area. The committee may simply ignore the bill and let it “DIE” or . . .

3 The committee will then hold hearings. It does this to gather information about the bill.

4 The committee may approve the bill as is, rewrite it, or KILL the bill. If approved, it goes to the FULL house (H.O.R/Senate).

H.O.R.: Rules committee sets rules for debates and amendments on the bill.

It also schedules when the debates will occur.

5 H.O.R./Senate will then hold

debates to determine whether to approve or

KILL the bill.

Page 5: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

1 A bill is introduced into the H.O.R. or Senate and given a title and a number.

2 Then it is referred to a committee that specializes in that particular area. The committee may simply ignore the bill and let it “DIE” or . . .

3 The committee will then hold hearings. It does this to gather information about the bill.

4 The committee may approve the bill as is, rewrite it, or KILL the bill. If approved, it goes to the FULL house (H.O.R/Senate)

H.O.R.: Rules committee sets rules for debates and amendments on the bill.

It also schedules when the debates will occur.

5 H.O.R./Senate will then hold

debates to determine whether to approve or

KILL the bill.

6 If the bill receives a majority vote, it will then go to the “other house” for approval. The “other house” will now go through the same steps (1-5)! Again, it can KILL or APPROVE the bill at each of these steps.

Page 6: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

1 A bill is introduced into the H.O.R. or Senate and given a title and a number.

2 Then it is referred to a committee that specializes in that particular area. The committee may simply ignore the bill and let it “DIE” or . . .

3 The committee will then hold hearings. It does this to gather information about the bill.

4 The committee may approve the bill as is, rewrite it, or KILL the bill. If approved, it goes to the FULL house (H.O.R/Senate)

H.O.R.: Rules committee sets rules for debates and amendments on the bill.

It also schedules when the debates will occur.

5 H.O.R./Senate will then hold

debates to determine whether to approve or

KILL the bill.

6 If the bill receives a majority vote, it will then go to the “other house” for approval. The “other house” will now go through the same steps (1-5)! Again, it can KILL or APPROVE the bill at each of these steps.

Conference Committee

Page 7: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

7A The “other house” could have a different version of the bill, which is usually the case. If this is the case, the bill is referred to a Conference Committee, made up of members from BOTH houses. The bill may still “DIE” if committee can’t agree.

7B The bill is then revised (BOTH houses get the identical version) and sent back to EACH of the houses for final approval.

7C The bill must be approved in BOTH houses. If just one house disapproves, the bill “DIES.”

Page 8: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

Sent to the president

8A The president can sign the bill or allow it to become a law without signing it.

BILL BECOMES

LAW!

7A The “other house” could have a different version of the bill, which is usually the case. If this is the case, the bill is referred to a Conference Committee, made up of members from BOTH houses. The bill may still “DIE” if committee can’t agree.

7B The bill is then revised (BOTH houses get the identical version) and sent back to EACH of the houses for final approval.

7C The bill must be approved in BOTH houses. If just one house disapproves, the bill “DIES.”

Page 9: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

President

7A The “other house” could have a different version of the bill, which is usually the case. If this is the case, the bill is referred to a Conference Committee, made up of members from BOTH houses. The bill may still “DIE” if committee can’t agree.

7B The bill is then revised (BOTH houses get the identical version) and sent back to EACH of the houses for final approval.

7C The bill must be approved in BOTH houses. If just one house disapproves, the bill “DIES.”

8C The president vetoes the bill.

9A The bill is sent back to the house where it started from. That house must then approve it by a 2/3 vote, then send it to the “other house” where it needs to be approved by a 2/3 vote. This is very difficult to do. If there is no 2/3 vote, the bill “DIES.”

9B If there is, then the bill becomes a law!

BILL BECOMES

LAW!

8B If Congress is out of secession and the president does nothing with the bill, it will die. This is called a pocket veto because the president kills the bill by doing nothing to it! This is very rare though.

OR

Page 10: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

Sent to the president

6A . . . The “other house” could have a different version of the bill, which is usually the case. If this is the case, the bill is referred to a Conference Committee, made up of members from BOTH houses. Even here, if the committee can’t agree, the bill “DIES.”

6B The bill is then revised (BOTH houses get the identical version) and sent back to EACH of the houses for final approval.

6C The bill must be approved in BOTH houses. If just one house disapproves, the bill “DIES.”

7C The president vetoes the bill.

8A The bill is sent back to the house where it started from. That house must then approve it by a 2/3 vote, then send it to the “other house” where it needs to be approved by a 2/3 vote. This is very difficult to do. If there is no 2/3 vote, the bill “DIES.”

8B If there is, then the bill becomes a law!

BILL BECOMES

LAW!

law

Page 11: How A Bill Becomes A Law The idea for a bill can come from ANYONE : regular citizens, interest groups (special organizations), politicians, even students!

Bill intro. in Senate.

Committee related to the

bill studies and debates it.

Entire Senate votes on it. Goes to the

HOR.

Bill intro. in HOR.

Committee related to the

bill studies and debates it.

Entire HOR votes on it.

Conference Committee.

PresidentSigns it

Veto

Law

Remember, a bill can start Remember, a bill can start in the in the SenateSenate or or HORHOR!!

Here’s how the entire process looks overall!