How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of...

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How a Bill Becomes a Law

Transcript of How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of...

Page 1: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

How a Bill Becomes a Law

Page 2: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill.

Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives or the Senate.A member of the House or Senate drafts a bill.They submit the bill to the House or Senate. The bill is assigned a number that begins with:

• H.R. for House of Representatives• S. for Senate

The bill is then sent to the appropriate committee.

Page 3: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill.

Let's pretend the voters from Representative Hannon' state (His constituents or the people he represents) want a law requiring seatbelts on school buses. He and his staff write a bill, which is a draft (early version) of the proposed law. The bill is then passed out to each Representative in the House.

The person (or people) who proposes the bill is the bill’s Sponsor

Page 4: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

A Bill is reviewed by committees.

A Standing Committee (a small, permanent group made up of legislators who studies and reports on bills) reviews the bill and does one of three things:

1. Sends the bill back with no changes.2. Makes changes and sends it back.3. Tables the bill -- In other words, they can do nothing.

Page 5: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.
Page 6: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

The Bill is reviewed by committees.

If the committee sends it back with no changes, then the bill goes on the House's calendar to be voted on. When that day comes, the bill is voted on and if over half of the Representatives (218 of 435) vote yes, it passes.

Page 7: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

The Bill is reviewed by committees.

If the bill is passed by the House, it then moves to the other branch of Congress, the Senate. The bill goes to a Senate committee, which studies the bill, and then it is voted on by the Senators. Just as in the House, if over half of the representatives (51 of 100) vote yes, it passes the bill.

Page 8: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

If the House and Senate vote to approve a bill, the bill goes to the President.

Page 9: How a Bill Becomes a Law. A member of the House or Senate introduces a bill. Only a Member of Congress can take a proposed law to the House of Representatives.

Veto or Sign

If the President vetoesthe bill, it returns

to congress.

If the President signsThe bill, it becomes

law.

If the bill gets a 2/3rdsmajority vote in

Congress, it becomesa law. This called

veto override