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Chapter 6 Section 4

Chapter 6 Section 4. How a Bill Becomes a Law. I. Types of Bills. What are the 2 categories of bills? -Private bills: concern individual ppl -Public bills: apply to the entire nation and general matters 2. Define resolutions.

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Chapter 6 Section 4

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  1. Chapter 6Section 4 How a Bill Becomes a Law

  2. I. Types of Bills • What are the 2 categories of bills? -Private bills: concern individual ppl -Public bills: apply to the entire nation and general matters 2. Define resolutions. -Formal statements expressing lawmakers’ opinions or decisions 3. What are joint resolutions? - resolutions passed by both houses of Congress - become laws if signed by the president

  3. II. From Bill to Law 4. Where do all bills start? -With an idea - ideas come from members of Congress, private citizens, special-interest groups, White House, etc.. 5. Who can introduce bills into Congress? - Senators and Representatives 6. Where must money bills start? - House of Representatives

  4. II. From Bill to Law 7. Once a bill is introduced, what is it given? -A title and number 8. What happens to bills once they reach the standing committee? -The chairperson decides if it gets ignored or studied -If merits attention, will be researched, public hearings held, and citizens can send in written statements

  5. II. From Bill to Law 9. What are the 5 things the standing committee can do to bills? • Pass the bill w/o changes • Mark up a bill with changes and suggest that it be passed • Replace the original bill with a new alternative • Ignore the bill and let it die (pigeonholing) • Kill the bill outright by majority vote

  6. II. From Bill to Law 10. Once a bill leaves the committee, what happens to it? -Bills are put on calendars (schedules), in chronological order as they come out of committees -The Senate takes up bills in the order listed -The House schedule, is controlled by the Rules Committee, can give priority to the bills that are most important

  7. II. From Bill to Law 11. Once a bill reaches the floor, what happens? -Members argue pros and cons -Amendments may be discussed as well 12. What is a rider and which house allows them? -Completely unrelated amendments -Senate

  8. II. From Bill to Law 13. What are the terms for debate established in the House of Representatives? Who determines the terms? -House: Time limit on discussion -Senate: can speak as long as the wish, don’t even have to address the topic at hand -Rules Committee for House

  9. II. From Bill to Law 14. What is a filibuster? How can it be ended? -Talking w/o stopping in order to talk a bill to death -Three-fifths of the member vote for cloture 15. Describe the e different ways to vote for a bill. • Voice vote- those in favor say “yea”, those against say “no” • Standing vote- those in favor stand to be counted, then those against stand to be counted • House uses a computerized system to record each vote • Roll-call vote: voice their votes in turn as an official records them

  10. II. From Bill to Law 16. After a bill is approved by Congress, where does it go? - To the president 17. Once the president receives the bill, what are his/her options? • Sign the bill and declare it a new law • Veto- refuse to sign • Do nothing for 10 days. If Congress in session, bill b/ms law w/o President’s signature. If Congress had adjourned, bill dies (pocket veto)

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