government chapter 12 section 3
sieve
(n) a sifting device, gatekeeper.
Cosponsorship
- how to get a bill passed - Sponsor is the introducer, cosponsor signs on after introduction. - The more, the better. - Getting people who don't normally support you is especially good - Co sponsors ( get different legislatures to sign on bill and say I'm going to vote for this, getting people who don't normally support you is especially good)
house or senate
a bill is a proposed law presented to the __________________ for consideration.
30 days (7 in the rules committee)
a discharge petition enables members to force a bill that has remained in committee ___________________________ onto the floor for consideration.
resolution
a measure relating to the business of either house, or expressing an opinion; does not have the force of law and does not require the president's signature.
motion
a member can demand a vote by making a __________. then the house decides if they will support the bill or not.
discharge petition
a procedure enabling members to force a bill that has been pigeonholed in committee onto the floor for consideration.
joint resolution
a proposal for action that has the force of law when passed; usually deals with special circumstances or temporary matters.
bill
a proposed law presented to a legislative body for consideration.
concurrent resolution
a statement of position on an issue used by the house and senate acting jointly; does not have the force of law and does not require the president's signature.
tax bills
remember, bills can start in the house or senate and then have to go to the other house besides ______.
lawmaking process, little legislatures
standing committees play an essential role in the ______________________ and in both houses of congress. their place is so pivotal that they are sometimes called "_________________________."
house, either chamber
tax bills must first be acted upon by the _________. measures dealing with any other matter may be introduced in ____________________.
constitution
the ________________ makes no mention of standing committees.
speaker of the house
the _________________ can end a debate.
motion, floor, majority
the house can push a bill out of committee by one member can make a ___________ (for a discharge petition). to discharge that bill a majority vote of the house has to agree. so, if the bill gets stuck in a committee, a member makes a motion to release a bill, goes to a vote on the ______, the _____________ has to agree.
rules
the house has more limits when it comes to debate because it has more _________.
the house rules committee
the house of representatives committee that determines rules of debate on a bill:
mechanically, open
the house votes _______________ and they vote yes or no. whether it's the house or the senate, all votes are ______. they are recorded and published, no secret votes.
sieves
the standing committees act as _________.-- they sift through all of the many bills referred to them--rejecting most, considering and reporting those they find to be worthy of floor consideration.
engross
to print a bill in its final form.
policy
when a president has a ________, they push in congress to promote the bill.
subcommittees
once a bill reaches a committee, the chairman almost always refers it to one of several ______________________.
members, hopper
only ____________ can introduce bills in the house, and they do so by dropping them into the ___________, a box hanging on the edge of the clerk's desk.
majority (218)
any member may file a discharge motion and if the motion is signed by a __________________ of house members, the committee has seven days to report the bill.
fate of most bills
basically, the ___________________ is decided in standing committees rather than on the floor of either house.
cosponsors
before a member introduces a bill, he or she will inform other members why they think it should become a law. he or she hopes to persuade several other members to become _________________, thereby increasing the chances that the bill will be passed. by the time many measures are introduced, in either house, a number of members are listed on them as cosponsors.
standing committees
business, labor, agriculture, and other special interest groups often draft measures, as well. many others (bills) are born in the ______________________ of congress.
regulated
debate in the house is much more _____________ than debate in the senate.
pigeonholed
expression describing how most bills introduced in each session of congress are buried, put away, or never acted upon.
public hearings
for an important or controversial measure, a committee, or most often one of its subcommittees, holds ____________________.
10 percent
from 6,000 to 9,000 bills and resolutions are introduced in the house and senate during each session of congress. fewer than _____________ become law.
mondays
if it does not (if the committee does not report the bill), any member who signed the motion may, on the second and fourth ______________ of each month, move that the bill be discharged from the committee--that is, sent to the floor. if the motion carries, the rules require the house to consider the bill at once.
page
if the bill passes in the house, the speaker signs it and gives it to a ______ who are assistants in the house and the senate. it is then walked through congress and handed to the president pro tempore if it hasn't been introduced in the senate yet.
subpoena
interested parties, public officials, and others, are invited to testify at these information-gathering sessions.(public hearings) if necessary, a committee can issue a ___________, forcing a witness to testify.
quorum
least number of members who must be present for a legislative body to conduct business; majority.
executive branch
many of the most important bills are born in the _____________________.
pigeonholed, committee
most of the thousands of bills introduced in each session of congress are __________________. that is, they are buried; they die in _______________. they are put away, never to be acted upon.
majority, discharge petition
most pigeonholed bills deserve their fate but if a committee buries a measure that a ___________ of the members of the house want to consider, it can be blasted out of the committee with a _________________________.
public expense
occasionally, a subcommittee will make a trip to locations affected by a measure. these trips are made at __________________, and members of congress are sometimes criticized for taking them.
(1) report the bill favorably with a "do pass" recommendation. it is then the chairman's job to steer the bill through debate on the floor. (2) refuse to report the bill (pigeonhole it). this is the fate suffered by most measures in both houses. (3) report the bill in amended form. many bills are changed in committee, and several bills on the same subject may be combined into a single measure. (4) report the bill with an unfavorable recommendation. (does not often happen but sometimes a committee feels that the full house should have a chance to consider a bill or does not want to take the responsibility for killing it). (5) report a committee bill. the panel produces a substantially rewritten measure as a substitute for one or several of the bills referred to it.
when a subcommittee has completed its work on a bill, the measure goes to the full committee. at the chairman's direction, that body may do one of several things. it may:
