How Congress Functions to Develop Laws
Congress has the responsibility for representing the citizens
of the United States of America as policy is developed and updated
or eliminated. The work of preparing and considering legislation
is done largely by committees of both houses of Congress. All
proceedings of Congress are published in the "Congressional
Record" which is issued when Congress is in
session. Check the index of current proceedings at http://www.gpoaccess.gov/cri.
Congress convenes in January and begins committee hearings as
soon as possible. It is important to know when a bill or resolution
is going to be introduced, discussed, sent to committee, reported,
and voted on.
How a Bill Becomes Law: An Overview
Congress uses a committee
system to work bills through a screening process,
from introduction through committee work to floor action. For
advocacy to be meaningful, it is vital to know how a bill moves
through a committee to reach the floor for action. Here is a brief
summary of the process:
- A member of Congress introduces a bill. Learn how to obtain
a copy of legislation.
- The bill is referred to a committee and, in turn, to a subcommittee.
- The subcommittee holds hearings on the bill and then amends
(“markup”) and sends it back to the full committee.
- The full committee may amend the bill further (at full committee
“markup”) and then issue a report on it.
- The bill is now ready for
floor action, where it may be debated and further
amended.
- If the bill passes, it is then sent to the other chamber,
where the same process is reenacted. Frequently, each chamber
is working simultaneously on the same or similar legislation.
- Once both chambers have passed their versions of the bill,
they can reconcile any differences by agreeing to, or modifying,
the amendments of the other chamber – or by sending the
measure to a conference committee.
- The conference committee tries to arrive at language acceptable
to both bodies.
- The bill, as agreed upon by the conference committee and
now referred to as a “conference report” is sent
back to the Senate and the House for approval.
- Once both the Senate and the House agree on the exact language
of the bill, the legislation is sent to the President for approval
and signature into law.
- Should the President veto the bill, the Congress will normally
have the option of trying to override the veto. This action
requires a two-thirds majority vote of both the Senate and the
House.
Only members of Congress can introduce a bill, and any House or
Senate member can either introduce or cosponsor legislation. Each
bill or resolution is usually referred to the appropriate committee,
which may “report a bill out” in its original form,
favorably or unfavorably, recommend amendments, or allow the proposed
legislation to die in committee without action. Proposals may also
be introduced by the committee or subcommittee chair responsible
for a particular subject area.
Learn more about how committees
work and how to contact committees.
Once a bill is passed by one chamber, the measure is sent to
the other chamber for consideration, and follows a similar path
from subcommittee to full committee to floor action. Often a representative
and a senator offer similar proposals on the same policy issue,
called companion bills, which may be acted on either simultaneously
or at different times.
When both the House and the Senate pass similar bills on a single
policy issue, the measure is sent to a conference committee, composed
of members from the relevant committees of both chambers, who
meet to resolve differences between the two versions. Citizens
can still influence policy decisions during this process. The
resulting compromise “conference report” must be passed,
without amendments, by the full House and Senate.
The approved conference report is sent to the White House for
executive action,
a presidential signature or veto. All proceedings of Congress
are published in the “Congressional
Record” which is issued when Congress is in
session.
Learn more about Congress:
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