How it works: in practice
Passing the Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act
How it works: in theory
Passing Legislation
*Points at which a bill can be amended.
†Points at which a bill can die.
House
Modifies
Senate Bill
Senate
Modifies
House Bill
Speaker of House
Receives Bill
Committee*†
Subcommittee*†
Rules Committee*†
Bill Reported Out by
Full Committee
Amends or
Approves
Bill from
Committee
House Floor*†
House Bill Senate Bill
Approve
House Amends
Senate Bill*†
House Floor†
Conference Committee*†
Conference Report*†
Adoption by
Both Houses†
House Approves
Senate Bill†
Law
Veto
House and Senate Floor†
Veto Override
President of Senate
Receives Bill
Committee*†
Subcommittee*†
Majority Leader
Bill Reported Out by
Full Committee
Amends or
Approves
Bill from
Committee
Senate Floor*†
Senate Amends
House Bill*†
Senate Floor†
Senate Approves
House Bill†
White House†
- What are the most significant ways
in which the process to pass the 2017
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act deviated from
the conventional method? - Do you think the 2017 Tax
Cuts and Jobs Act could have been
passed without this unconventional
process? Why or why not?
Critical Thinking
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provides
an example of how passing legislation often
deviates from the conventional method.
In the
Senate...
The Senate Finance
Committee crafted the
initial Senate version.
So the Budget Committee saves the day.
In the
House...
The House Ways and Means
Committee crafted H.R. 1, the
House version of the Tax Bill.
All tax bills must originate
in the House.
House passes
its version.
Senate passes
its version.
Not so fast.
Republicans cannot pass the
Finance Committee’s version
without the 60 votes needed
to break a filibuster.
Vote-a-rama!
After 355 amendments to the reconciliation
bill are proposed, key provisions ratifying
McConnell’s deals are approved and the
Democrats’ efforts are defeated in a
marathon of overnight voting.
Passed!
House passes the
conference report. Passed!
President Trump
signs the bill into law.
Signed into law.
Passed!
Senate passes the
conference report—
with amendments.
Meanwhile,
on the Left...
10 Democratic senators
try to slow the bill down
by sending it to the
Finance Committee.
Meanwhile,
on the Right...
Several Republican
senators say they will vote
against the bill if changes
are not made, so Majority
Leader Mitch McConnell
cuts some deals.
Conference
committee works
out the differences
in the House version
of H.R. 1 and the
revamped Senate
version of H.R. 1.
House passes
the Senate’s
amendments.
The Senate Budget Committee packages the Finance
Committee’s bill with a bill on drilling for oil as a reconciliation
bill (which only needs 51 votes, rather than a filibuster-proof
60, to be approved). It keeps the title of the House bill, H.R.
1, on this new bill to preserve the fiction that it originated in
the House and then submits it in the Senate.
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