A bill is an idea that may or may not become a law.
Members of either the US Senate or the US
House of Representatives can propose bills at the National level of government.
Sometimes legislators get ideas for bills from citizens or lobbyists.
Click here to see examples of bills:
Example of a Bill Flag Bill
Anne Frank Bill Equal Rights Bill
To See More Bills click HERE
War Bill
All bills begin in the US Congress!
4-5.Bill to Law- Where does a bill begin?
In the House of Representatives all members must submit their bills to the clerk of the House.
The bill is then referred to a specific committee by the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
A committee hears bills and then recommends changes to them based on the testimony of the public and experts.
Once in committee the bill is generally given to a sub committee.
There are many committees in the House of
Representatives and the US Senate.
Some of the more powerful committees include (click on any below to see their website):
Appropriations
Ways and Means
Education and Labor
House Armed Services
Inside the US House of
Representatives Chamber
7. The Speaker of the House is the person in charge of the political party with the most seats in the House of
Representatives. Today, the Democrats control the House and Nancy Pelosi is the Speaker
Bill to Law- What is a committee?
A committee is made up 10-45 members of the
House of Representatives who craft bills pertaining to a similar subject such as education, defense, transportation, energy, etc.
For example, if a bill was introduced to create a national test for each high school subject the bill would must likely be referred to the Education
Committee where it would be debated and altered based on the testimony of experts and the public.
US House of Representatives
Committee Rooms
8. Bill to Law- House of
Representatives Committees
Continued
A draft bill is released to all appropriate government agencies and the public for comment.
If the bill is not killed in a sub-committee than it is sent to the whole committee to vote on.
The committee then meets to prepare a report on the bill. In preparing the report they might recommend that the bill be changed or amended when it is debated on the floor of the House before every member.
9. Bill to Law- House of
Representatives Committees
Continued
After the report a committee decides on whether or not to pass the bill on to the entire House of
Representatives during the mark-up hearing, in other words, the committee can recommend that the entire
House of Representatives debate the advantages and disadvantages of the bill. They also typically send a report explaining why the bill should be passed from the committee’s majority. There may also be a an explanation from the committee’s minority explaining why it should not be passed.
Bill to Law- Example: A bill to mandate testing
For example, if a the bill mandate every student to take a national test on each subject they take in high school it would probably be sent to the
Education Committee by the Speaker of the
House. The Education Committee chairperson would then send it to the Secondary Education sub-committee to review and report on. Only after the subcommittee reviewed the bill would the entire committee meet to discuss its merits, hear testimony from the public and decide whether or not to mark the bill up to the entire
House of Representatives.
10-11. Bill to Law- Before the entire
House of Representatives
Once the bill has been marked up it is sent to the Rules
Committee who decides the time allotted to debate the bill and other rules regarding the debate of the bill
The Rules Committee then sends the bill before the entire House of Representatives who can decide to pass or reject the bill. If the bill is rejected the process stops there. If a majority of the members of the House of
Representatives pass the bill it then goes to the US
Senate.
If the bill is passed in the House of Representatives entire process begins again in the US Senate.
Often times bills are introduced at the same time by a member of the US House of
Representatives and a member of the US
Senate. Either way the bill must begin in the committee it is assigned to by the
Majority Leader in the US Senate.
Bill to Law- US Senate Continued
Similar to the House of Representatives the bill is studied in a Senate Committee only Senate committees have far fewer members because there are only 100
Senators.
If the bill is marked-up from committee it then goes before the entire US Senate
13. Bill to Law- US Senate
Continued
Unlike the House of Representatives the bill will not go before the Rules Committee. In the Senate there are very few rules. As a result Senators can add many amendments and riders (laws or appropriations having little to do with the actual bill) to the bill.
Occasionally Senators are very opposed to a bill and decide to hold up Senate debate by filibustering the bill (delaying any action on a bill by talking a bill to death- the longest filibuster was by South Carolina
Sen. Strom Thurmond who spoke for over 24 hours straight in opposition to the 1959 Civil Rights bill). A filibuster can not be stopped unless 60 members of the US Senate agree to end the filibuster.
14-15. Bill to Law-Conference
Committee
If the bill does not pass through the
Senate it dies.
If the bill passes through the Senate in the same form as it was passed in the House of Representatives it goes to the President who can either sign it or veto it.
If the bill passes, but in a different form from the House of Representatives it goes to a Conference Committee .
15-16. Bill to Law-Conference
Committee
A Conference Committee consists of senior
(longest serving) members from each the House and the Senate assigned to it by each the
Senate’s and House of Representatives’ presiding officers (most powerful members).
They in turn come to common terms on the bill and write a report to send back to both the
House of Representatives and the US Senate for a second floor vote.
Most major legislation is sent to a Conference
Committee.
Bill to Law-Conference Committee
Example: Bill to Law- Bill to mandate testing
Lets say the bill to mandate testing in all high school subjects passed in the House and passed in the Senate, only the Senate version contains a rider on it to ensure $30 million of funding to the National Knitting
Museum and the Largest Yarn Ball in
America. The bill would then go to
Conference in order for the House and
Senate to resolve their differences.
17-18. Bill to Law- The President
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.
Once a bill becomes law it is given an official number and can not be changed unless it is challenged in court or Congress alters it.
19. Bill to Law- Overriding a Veto
If the President vetoes a bill the Congress can override it only if 2/3rds of both the US
Senate and the House of Representatives agree to override the Presidential veto.
Rarely are vetoes overridden.
Bill to Law in Greater Details
Live Footage of Congress debating whether or not children should receive health care
Senator Clinton Questions General Petraeus on the War in Iraq
Clips from Presidential Debate
Debate
Republican Presidential Debate Clip
Democrat Presidential Debate Clip
Presidential Press Conference