How a bill becomes a law
As a child growing up one of the topic I found most interesting was Law. The reason being was I wanted to be a lawyer. I spent a lot of my JHS years watching shows like "the Practice" etc. When I was given the opportunity to do a report for my government class I could not decide on what to do my report. I constantly hear people complain and criticize the law. I've quoted everyday citizens saying that it must have been some idiot who passed a law like that. But the reality is it is not one person who passes a law but it is several people. It take a lot of time and debating to go through with passing a law. Therefore the topic I chose was: "How a Bill becomes a Law" The road a bill takes in becoming a law is a long and tedious process. First, the proposed bill goes through the House of Representatives. Once the bill has been approved by the House, it is then begins its journey through the Senate. After the bill has been endorsed by the Senate, the houses of congress then meet in conference committees to prepare the bill to be sent to the White House. To summarize, the path the bill takes to become a law is a fairly complex impediment. Now to begin, the bill must primarily go through the obstacles of the H
If the President decides to veto, the bill must be sent back to congress with an explanation of the objections. To wrap up, the House and Senate make comprimises and then the President gives his contribution. If the bill passes a simple majority of only one more then half the votes, it goes to the Senate. The clerk of the house of congress that originated the bill certifies the final version. The modified bill is then sent back to both houses for their final approval. The committee may revise and release the bill by reporting it out, or lay it aside so that the house cannot vote on it by tabling. The President then has three choices: approval, veto, or no action. First, a sponsor introduces the bill by giving it to the clerk of the House or placing the bill in a box called the "hopper". First, the bill is again introduced but now by a senator who must be recognized by the presiding officer and announce the introduction of the bill. Afterwards, the Speaker of the House signs the enrolled bill, and then the Vice President signs it. A conference committee made up of members of both houses works out the differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill. Secondly, the bill goes the Senate where the it is debated. The bill is then reconsidered and if two-thirds of those members present approve the vetoed bill, it becomes law despite the veto. The clerk numbers and gives a title to the bill and is then entered in the House journal and in the Congressional Record in a procedure called the first reading.
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