Bills in Congress Laws start out as bills introduced by members of Congress Ideas for bills come from constituents, interest groups, the president and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 12: Congress in Action Section 3
Advertisements

How a Bill Becomes a Law CP Chapter 12. The Rough Draft Starts in Congress (House or Senate) Researched Passes President signs it into a law.
Warm Up: What law would you like to see passed? (must be Constitutional) What law would you like to see passed? (must be Constitutional) How could you.
The Legislative Process
Legislative Process How A Bill Becomes A Law.
How a Bill becomes a Law.
How a Bill Becomes a Law. Thousands of bills are introduced each session ◦6,562 were introduced in the 111 th Congress ◦Bills can only be introduced by.
How a Bill Becomes a Law. Bills Travel at Different Speeds Bills to spend money, tax, or regulate businesses move slowly Bills with a clear, appealing.
Essential Question  Why do you think only 10% of all bills proposed actually become a law?
HOW FEDERAL LAWS ARE MADE Learning Objectives Explain where the ideas for laws may come from. Name the six steps it takes for a bill to become a law. Give.
The Legislative Process
How a Bill Becomes Law.
How A Bill Becomes A Law An educational journey behind the scenes of: “I’m Just a Bill”
How a Bill Becomes a Law Civics. Types of legislation Bills: thousands are introduced, few become laws Public bills: involve national issues Private bills:
How Congress Works. A Bill v. A Law Bill - a proposed new law introduced within a legislature that has not yet been passed, enacted or adopted.
Chapter 6.4 How a Bill Becomes a Law. Types of Bills  Of the more than 10,000 bills introduced each congressional term, only several hundred become law.
Section 4 I can describe the process how a bill becomes a law.
How A Bill Becomes A Law.
How a Bill Becomes A Law. Legislation is Introduced House: Legislation is handed to the Clerk House: Legislation is handed to the Clerk Senate: Members.
Government Chapter 7 How a Bill Becomes a Law. m/watch?v=Ld4daZsx1Z 4.
Continued Notes.  Main purpose is to make laws  The process created through the Constitution is slow and complicated  It encourages compromise  There.
Chapter 12: Congress in Action Section 3. Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc.Slide 2 Chapter 12, Section 3 Objectives 1.Students will be able to complete.
The Legislative Branch Chapter 4 Section 6 Congress at Work – Making Laws.
1.What is a divided government? 2._________ committees are temporary committees. 3._________ is when laws bring benefits and government projects to a Congresspersons’
How A Bill Becomes A Law.
HOW A BILL BECOMES A LAW.
How a Bill Becomes a Law The Journey of a Bill.
Why do people create, structure, and change governments?
Congress In Action Making a Bill a Law.
Making Law Chapter 12 Sections 3 & 4.
Types of Bills Bills fall into two categories: Private Bills concern individual people or places; Public Bills apply to the entire nation and involve.
Warm-ups (04/15 – Unit VI) List and explain the 3 reasons why the United States has a Bicameral Congress.
A Bill Becomes A Law House of Representatives Senate.
How a Bill Becomes A Law.
Congress performs it’s functions
Chapter 5 Section 5 Mr. Gordon.
How A Bill Becomes A Law.
Congress in Action Unit 2.
How a Bill Becomes a Law Unit 3.
How a Bill Becomes a Law.
How a Bill Becomes Law Ch 12 Sections 3 and 4.
How a Bill Becomes Law.
Government Chapter 7 How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Congress in Action.
How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Supplemental Materials for Chapter 12-Streamlined Version
Legislative Process: How a Bill Becomes a Law
Chapter 5 Section 5 Mr. Gordon.
Chapter 5 Section 5 Mr. Plude.
Chapter 12: Congress in Action Section 3
How a Bill becomes a Law
Supplemental Materials for Chapter 12-Streamlined Version
Mr. Rosenstock Government San Fernando High School
Congress In Action Chapter 12.
…Admit it… You started to sing in your head didn’t you?
Chapter 12 Congress and the Passage of Bills
HOW A BILL BECOMES A LAW.
Government Chapter 7 How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Bellringer 3/3 What are express powers? Provide one example. What are implied powers? Provide one example.
How A Bill Becomes A Law.
HOW A BILL BECOMES A LAW.
How a Bill becomes a Law Chapter 8 Section 4.
How a Bill Becomes a Law How a Bill Becomes a Law.
The Legislative Process
Supplemental Materials for Chapter 12-Streamlined Version
How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Chapter 5 The Legislative Branch
How a Bill Becomes a Law.
How a Bill Becomes a Law.
Essential Question: How does a bill become a law?
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5: Congress: The Legislative Branch Section 5: The Legislative Process (pg.149-155)

Bills in Congress Laws start out as bills introduced by members of Congress Ideas for bills come from constituents, interest groups, the president and members of Congress. Only a member of Congress can introduce a bill for consideration.

Introducing Bills Both senators and House members introduce bills. The one exception is that, tax bills and appropriation bills have to begin in the House. In the House the bill is dropped into a wooden box called a hopper. In the Senate a senator hands the paperwork to a clerk. Thousands are submitted during a session of Congress. A private bill affects only a particular person or group, and a public bill affects all of society. A bill may deal w/ a single topic or many topics. A rider may be added to a popular bill to get something unpopular to pass or a rider may be added as a poison bill to stop a popular bill from passing.

Other Types of Action A joint resolution is much like a bill- it follows the same procedures as a bill and has the force of law if it passed by both houses and signed by the president. They are used in out-of-the-ordinary circumstances, like to propose constitutional amendments. Concurrent resolutions are used when both houses address matters that affect operations of both chambers or express an opinion. They are not signed by the president and don’t have the force of law. Each chamber can pass resolutions that apply to matters of concern just within that chamber, like election of leadership or committee assignments.

Bills in Committee Committees act as a filter b/c most bills die in committee. A bill is assigned to a committee by the Speaker in the house and by the majority leader in the Senate, this is called referral. The next step is holding hearings, which are open to the public. The Chair of the committee or subcommittee has the power to control who appears at the hearings and how the public views the bill.

Bills in Committee Following the hearing, a subcommittee must report on the bill to the full committee. They may report favorably of unfavorably (killing it) The subcommittees can also make amendments to the bill The markup is a meeting of the full committee and debate the bill further. They can kill the bill or they can include so many amendments that the bill is a new piece of legislation, called a clean bill. In the House, the majority of members may sign a discharge petition, forcing the bill out of committee.

House Rules As we saw in section 3 of this chapter the House Rules Committee acts as a “traffic cop.” Most bills must pass through this committee before reaching the full House. The rules assigned by the Rules Committee govern how the bill can be debated or amended by the full House. There are 3 main types: open, closed, & modified rules. They can also limit the debate on the bill. They can also kill the bill. Bills can bypass the Rules Committee if two-thirds of the House agrees to suspend the rules

The Bill in the House The 1st step in the process is the adoption of the rules put forward by the Rules Committee. The next step is to work as a Committee of the Whole. The reason they may do this is b/c it brings the quorum number down from 218 to 100. The Committee of the Whole debates the bill and amendments and they can add related amendments (although they don’t always relate to the bill). The Committee of the Whole can’t vote on the bill, it has to dissolve and let the full house vote. Most important votes are usually called record votes, which is sometimes called a roll-call vote.

The Bill in the Senate The Senate doesn’t have a Rules Committee nor do they use a Committee of the Whole. The Senate doesn’t limit debate or the right to offer amendments. If a senator wants to place a limit on the bill it requires the unanimous consent of the Senate. This opens the door to filibuster or the Senate can end debate with three-fifths vote or 60 senators, on a cloture motion. When they are done debating they vote on the amendments & the bill. Important bills are often subject to roll-call votes.

The Conference Committee For a bills to be sent to the President they have to be passed in identical form by both houses. When there are major differences, members of a conference committee are drawn from each chamber. The conferees are chosen by the leaders of both houses. If they fail to reach an agreement the bill dies, but usually at this point the Conference Committee come to a compromise. The bill goes back to the floor of both houses for debate and if it passes both houses in it new version, the bill goes to the President’s desk.

Presidential Action on a Bill The President can do three things with a bill 1. The President can sign the bill which makes it a law. 2.The President can hold on to the bill and if the Congress ends its session within 10 days the bill dies. This is called a pocket veto. 3. The President may veto the bill. President’s usually have a veto message where they explain their specific objections.