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='''How Bills are Proposed to Congress'''=
<onlyinclude>In the United States, a bill is a proposed piece of legislation to be considered by the legislature. Specifically, entities ranging from corporations, citizens, special interest groups, and anything in between, can propose an idea for a bill to a legislator. A bill must be approved by the U.S Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, and in the federal case, the Executive Branch in order to become a law. If a bill is enacted into law, it is then formally reassigned as an Act or a statute.
A corporation, citizen, group, or any other entity can propose an idea for a bill to a legislator as the first step to get a bill created. If the legislator is in favor of the idea, he or she researches the idea and writes it into a bill.
=='''The Proposal''' == Since there are numerous bills proposed daily, committees composed of small groups of legislators, review the content of the proposed bill in detail. In addition, the bill needs a sponsor. Once a bill acquires this sponsor and gains the support of some other legislators, it is fit for introduction to the U.S House of Representatives
=='''The Introduction''' == Only legislator in the House of Representatives can introduce the bill to the House. The bill is then read out to all of the Representatives. If the bill is deemed an appropriate course of action, committees may refer a bill and sent to a subcommittee for further study and hearings on the piece one of legislation. Hearings provide an opportunity for experts, proponents, and opposition to make their views known during the subcommittee review processHouse standing committees.
'''Step 4:The Committee''' When the bill arrives at the committee, members of the committee that are experts on the bill's topics research and review the bill before voting on whether or not to send it back to the House floor. If more information on the bill is needed, committees may refer a bill to a subcommittee for further study and hearings on the piece of legislation. Hearings provide an opportunity for experts, proponents, and opposition to make their views known during the subcommittee review process. Following the hearing process, subcommittees may amend the bill prior to forwarding the piece of legislation to the full committee.
==''Step 5:'The Report' ''== Full Committees committees then make a recommendation to the House floor on whether or not they believe the bill should pass, be approve or rejected. Furthermore, or they may abstain from making a recommendation. The procedure is formally known as "ordering a bill reported".
==''Step 6'The Debate:'' '== After The Representatives of the House discuss and debate the committee has voted on a bill. Representatives recommend changes and with enough support, enact those changes onto the committee chairman assigns staff to create a written report on bill. When all changes are final, the bill highlights: views of supporters and detractors, impact and changes is ready to current legislation, and scopebe voted on.
==''Step 7'The Vote:'' Once a bill is passed on from the committee, the committee's recommendation is read aloud to the legislative floor. Chamber members == There are three methods by which bills are encouraged to debate voted on in the bill and analyze House of Representatives#Voice Vote - The Speaker of the incorporation of potential amendments.House ask The Representative
=='''Step 8:'' '== After amendment approval and debate, the bill is subject to a vote of passage.
=='''Step 9:'' '== When a bill is passed by one chamber it is then referred to the other and undergoes a similar approval process. The chamber may approve the bill, reject it in its entirety, or propose changes.
''Step 10'': Depending on the severity of amendments, a bill is either returned to the chamber of origination for agreement, or for greater changes, a conference committee is created. The conference committee is formed to reconcile the differences between the chambers. If the conference committee fails to reach agreement, the legislation dies. If agreement is achieved, a conference report is drafted and forwarded to the chambers for approval .
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