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The U.S. House of
Representatives The Legislative Process - Tying it All
Together
- "All Legislative Powers herein
granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist
of a Senate and House of Representatives."
(Article I, Section 1, of the
United States
Constitution)
The chief function of Congress is
the making of laws. The legislative process comprises a number of steps, and
much information is available from this page concerning the legislation
introduced and considered in the 105th Congress. To help you understand the
information and how it interrelates, a very brief overview of the legislative
process within the House of Representatives is presented below. There are many
aspects and variations of the process which are not addressed here. A much more
in-depth discussion and presentation of the overall process is available in
How Our Laws Are
Made. Most of the information presented below was excerpted from that
Congressional document.
Forms of Congressional
Action
The work of Congress is initiated by
the introduction of a proposal in one of four principal forms: the bill, the
joint resolution, the concurrent resolution, and the simple resolution.
- Bills
- A bill is the form used for most
legislation, whether permanent or temporary, general or special, public or
private. A bill originating in the House of Representatives is designated by
the letters "H.R.", signifying "House of Representatives", followed by a number
that it retains throughout all its parliamentary stages. Bills are presented to
the President for action when approved in identical form by both the House of
Representatives and the Senate.
- Joint Resolutions
- Joint resolutions may originate
either in the House of Representatives or in the Senate. There is little
practical difference between a bill and a joint resolution. Both are subject to
the same procedure, except for a joint resolution proposing an amendment to the
Constitution. On approval of such a resolution by two-thirds of both the House
and Senate, it is sent directly to the Administrator of General Services for
submission to the individual states for ratification. It is not presented to
the President for approval. A joint resolution originating in the House of
Representatives is designated "H.J.Res." followed by its individual number.
Joint resolutions become law in the same manner as bills.
- Concurrent Resolutions
- Matters affecting the operations
of both the House of Representatives and Senate are usually initiated by means
of concurrent resolutions. A concurrent resolution originating in the House of
Representatives is designated "H.Con.Res." followed by its individual number.
On approval by both the House of Representatives and Senate, they are signed by
the Clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate. They are not presented
to the President for action.
- Simple Resolutions
- A matter concerning the operation
of either the House of Representatives or Senate alone is initiated by a simple
resolution. A resolution affecting the House of Representatives is designated
"H.Res." followed by its number. They are not presented to the President for
action.
For more information on bills and
resolutions see
Forms of
Congressional Action in
How Our Laws Are
Made.
Introduction and Referral to
Committee
Any Member in the House of
Representatives may introduce a bill at any time while the House is in session
by simply placing it in the "hopper" provided for the purpose at the side of
the Clerk's desk in the House Chamber. The sponsor's signature must appear on
the bill. A public bill may have an unlimited number of co-sponsoring Members.
The bill is assigned its legislative number by the Clerk and referred to the
appropriate committee by the Speaker, with the assistance of the
Parliamentarian. The bill is then printed in its introduced form, which you can
read in Bill Text. If a
bill was introduced today, summary information about it can be found in
Bill
Status Today for searching examples).
An important phase of the
legislative process is the action taken by committees. It is during committee
action that the most intense consideration is given to the proposed measures;
this is also the time when the people are given their opportunity to be heard.
Each piece of legislation is referred to the committee that has jurisdiction
over the area affected by the measure.
For more information on this step of
the legislative process see
Introduction
and Reference to Committee of
How Our Laws Are
Made.
Consideration by
Committee
- Public Hearings and Markup
Sessions
- Usually the first step in this
process is a public hearing, where the committee members hear witnesses
representing various viewpoints on the measure. Each committee makes public the
date, place and subject of any hearing it conducts. The
Committee Meetings
scheduled for today are available along with other
House Schedules . Public
announcements are also published in the Daily Digest portion of the
Congressional Record.
A transcript of the testimony taken
at a hearing is made available for inspection in the committee office, and
frequently the complete transcript is printed and distributed by the committee.
After hearings are completed, the
bill is considered in a session that is popularly known as the "mark-up"
session. Members of the committee study the viewpoints presented in detail.
Amendments may be offered to the bill, and the committee members vote to accept
or reject these changes.
This process can take place at
either the subcommittee level or the full committee level, or at both. Hearings
and markup sessions are status steps noted in the Legislative Action portion of
Bill
Status.
- Committee Action
- At the conclusion of
deliberation, a vote of committee or subcommittee Members is taken to determine
what action to take on the measure. It can be reported, with or without
amendment, or tabled, which means no further action on it will occur. If the
committee has approved extensive amendments, they may decide to report a new
bill incorporating all the amendments. This is known as a "clean bill," which
will have a new number. Votes in committee can be found in Committee Votes.
If the committee votes to report a
bill, the Committee
Report is written. This report describes the purpose and scope of the
measure and the reasons for recommended approval. House Report numbers are
prefixed with "H.Rpt." and then a number indicating the Congress (currently
105).
For more information on bills and
resolutions see
Consideration
by Committee in How
Our Laws Are Made.
House Floor
Consideration
- Consideration of a measure by the
full House can be a simple or very complex operation. In general a measure is
ready for consideration by the full House after it has been reported by a
committee. Under certain circumstances, it may be brought to the Floor
directly.
- The consideration of a measure
may be governed by a "rule." A rule is itself a simple resolution, which must
be passed by the House, that sets out the particulars of debate for a specific
bill -- how much time will allowed for debate, whether amendments can be
offered, and other matters.
- Debate time for a measure is
normally divided between proponents and opponents. Each side yields time to
those Members who wish to speak on the bill. When amendments are offered, these
are also debated and voted upon. If the House is in session today, you can see
a summary of Current House
Floor Proceedings .
- After all debate is concluded and
amendments decided upon, the House is ready to vote on final passage. In some
cases, a vote to "recommit" the bill to committee is requested. This is usually
an effort by opponents to change some portion or table the measure. If the
attempt to recommit fails, a vote on final passage is ordered.
Resolving
Differences
- After a measure passes in the
House, it goes to the Senate for consideration. A bill must pass both bodies in
the same form before it can be presented to the President for signature into
law.
- If the Senate changes the
language of the measure, it must return to the House for concurrence or
additional changes. This back-and-forth negotiation may occur on the House
floor, with the House accepting or rejecting Senate amendments or complete
Senate text. Often a conference committee will be appointed with both House and
Senate members. This group will resolve the differences in committee and report
the identical measure back to both bodies for a vote. Conference committees
also issue reports outlining the final version of the bill.
Final Step
- Votes on final passage, as well
as all other votes in the House, may be taken by the electronic voting system
which registers each individual Member's response. These votes are referred to
as Yea/Nay votes or recorded votes, and are available in House Votes by Bill
number, roll call vote number or words describing the reason for the vote.
- Votes in the House may also be by
voice vote, and no record of individual responses is available.
- After a measure has been passed
in identical form by both the House and Senate, it is considered "enrolled." It
is sent to the President who may sign the measure into law, veto it and return
it to Congress, let it become law without signature, or at the end of a
session, pocket-veto it.
Go to "The Legislative
Process".
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