American Government and Politics Today, Brief Edition, 2014-2015

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

216 PART THREE • iNsTiTuTioNs oF AMERiCAN govERNMENT


A bill goes to full committee, then usually to a specialized
subcommittee for study, hearings, revisions, and approval.
Then the bill goes back to full committee, where more hearings
and revisions may occur. The full committee may approve the
bill and recommend passage. Committees rarely give a bill an
unfavorable report. Instead, the bill may “die” in committee.
In the House, many bills go before the Rules Committee for a
“rule” expediting floor action, setting conditions for debate and
amendments on the floor. Some bills are “privileged” and go
directly to the floor. In the Senate, special rules are not used—the
leadership normally schedules action. A bill is debated, usually
amended, and then passed or defeated. If passed, it goes to the
other chamber to follow the same route through committee and
floor stages. If the other chamber has already passed a related bill,
as is often the case, both versions go straight to conference, as
shown in this figure.

HR 100


Introduced
in House

Referred to
House Committee

Referred to
Senate Committee

Referred to
Subcommittee

Referred to
Subcommittee

Reported by
Full Committee

Reported by
Full Committee

Rules Committee
Action

House Debate,
Vote on Passage

Senate Debate,
Vote on Passage

S 20 0


Introduced
in Senate

Compromise version of
bills HR 1 00/S 20 0
sent to House for approval

Compromise version of
bills HR 1 00/S 20 0
sent to Senate for approval

Conference Action
Once both chambers have passed related bills, a
conference committee of members from both
chambers is formed to work out differences. The
compromise version from conference is sent to
each chamber for final approval.

HR 10 0/S 20 0


A Bill

VETOED


HR 1 00/S 20 0


A Bill

SIGNED


A compromise bill approved by both chambers is sent to the president, who can sign it into law
or veto it and return it to Congress. Congress may override a veto by a two-thirds majority vote
in both chambers. The bill then becomes law without the president’s signature.

FiguRE 9–4: How a Bill Becomes Law


This illustration shows the most typical way in which proposed legislation is enacted into law. Most legislation begins as similar bills
introduced into the House and the Senate. The process is illustrated here with two hypothetical bills, House Bill No. 100 (HR 100)
and Senate Bill No. 200 (S 200). The path of HR 100 is shown on the left, and that of S 200, on the right.

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