Federal Legislative Process
Introduction:
Anyone
may draft a bill; however, only members of Congress can introduce
legislation, and by doing so become the sponsor(s). There
are four basic types of legislation: bills, joint resolutions,
concurrent resolutions and simple resolutions. The official
legislative process begins when a bill or resolution is numbered
H.R. signifies a House bill and S. a Senate bill
referred to a committee and printed by the Government Printing
Office.
Step
1. Referral to Committee:
With few exceptions, bills are referred to standing committees
in the House or Senate according to carefully delineated rules
of procedure.
Step
2. Committee Action:
When a bill reaches a committee it is placed on the committee's
calendar. A bill can be referred to a subcommittee or considered
by the committee as a whole. It is at this point that a bill
is examined carefully and its chances for passage are determined.
If the committee does not act on a bill, it is the equivalent
of killing it.
Step
3. Subcommittee Review:
Often, bills are referred to a subcommittee for study and
hearings. Hearings provide the opportunity to put on the record
the views of the executive branch, experts, other public officials,
supporters and opponents of the legislation. Testimony can
be given in person or submitted as a written statement.
Step
4. Mark Up:
When the hearings are completed, the subcommittee may meet
to "mark up" the bill, that is, make changes and amendments
prior to recommending the bill to the full committee. If a
subcommittee votes not to report legislation to the full committee,
the bill dies.
Step
5. Committee Action to Report a Bill:
After receiving a subcommittee's report on a bill, the full
committee can conduct further study and hearings, or it can
vote on the subcommittee's recommendations and any proposed
amendments. The full committee then votes on its recommendation
to the House or Senate. This procedure is called "ordering
a bill reported."
Step
6. Publication of a Written Report:
After a committee votes to have a bill reported, the committee
chairman instructs staff to prepare a written report on the
bill. This report describes the intent and scope of the legislation,
impact on existing laws and programs, position of the executive
branch and views of dissenting members of the committee.
Step
7. Scheduling Floor Action:
After a bill is reported back to the chamber where it originated,
it is placed in chronological order on the calendar. In the
House there are several different legislative calendars, and
the Speaker and majority leader largely determine if, when,
and in what order bills come up. In the Senate there is only
one legislative calendar.
Step
8. Debate:
When a bill reaches the floor of the House or Senate, there
are rules or procedures governing the debate on legislation.
These rules determine the conditions and amount of time allocated
for general debate.
Step
9. Voting:
After the debate and the approval of any amendments, the bill
is passed or defeated by the members voting.
Step
10. Referral to Other Chamber:
When a bill is passed by the House or the Senate it is referred
to the other chamber where it usually follows the same route
through committee and floor action. This chamber may approve
the bill as received, reject it, ignore it or change it.
Step
11. Conference Committee Action:
If only minor changes are made to a bill by the other chamber,
it is common for the legislation to go back to the first chamber
for concurrence. However, when the actions of the other chamber
significantly alter the bill, a conference committee is formed
to reconcile the differences between the House and Senate
versions. If the conferees are unable to reach agreement,
the legislation dies. If agreement is reached, a conference
report is prepared describing the committee members recommendations
for changes. Both the House and the Senate must approve of
the conference report.
Step
12. Final Actions:
After a bill has been approved by both the House and Senate
in identical form, it is sent to the President. If the President
approves of the legislation he signs it and it becomes law.
Or, the President can take no action for 10 days, while Congress
is in session, and it automatically becomes law. If the President
opposes the bill he can veto it; or, if he takes no action
after the Congress has adjourned its second session, it is
a "pocket veto" and the legislation dies.
Step
13. Overriding a Veto:
If the President vetoes a bill, Congress may attempt to "override
the veto." This requires a two-thirds roll call vote of the
members who are present in sufficient numbers for a quorum. |