The First Steps
Unorthodox Lawmaking and Emergency Legislation
Scheduling Floor Debate
House-Senate Conference Committees
The Presidents Act on the Bill
100

Where do Revenue bills originate from?

The House

100

What has changed the lawmaking process in recent decades?

A number of adjustments

100

How do the calendars, the Rule Committee, and other complex procedures help the House?

Help the House manage its workload.

100

The laws that overcome these challenges must also make through votes on the floor ____

in both houses.

100

What goes towards the President after being passed by Congress?

The bills and resolutions


200

How many days do members have to make changes in the Journal and Record?

5 Days

200

What is common for a bill to contain?

numerous issues and topics

200

Where are bills placed in?

Bills are placed within one of the calendars

200
Mention one challenge a bill must survive in order to become a law.

Be approved by the U.S. House of Representatives. Be approved by the U.S. Senate. Be signed by the President. 

200

Congress can override a veto but only if they have

enough votes.

300

Congress is involved in ______

Public bills, private bills, joint resolutions, concurrent resolutions, and resolutions.

300

Which branch can move faster than Congress when emergencies occur?

The Executive Branch

300

How do the calendars, the Rule Committee, and other complex procedures help the House?

It helps to manage the workload.

300

What stage is the most strategic step?

The Conference Committee 

300

Define Veto

Refuse to sign or reject a bill

400

What are the requirements for a bill or resolution to be added to the House Journal and Congressional Record?

It needs to be given a prefix, number, and a short title.

400

Who does not have the luxury to follow every step strictly by the book?

Congress

400

How do calendars help the House?

The calendars give the House a less stressful work environment

400

When the House and Senate do pass different versions of the same bill, the first house usually

concurs in other’s amendments.

400

What are the four options the President can do with the bill?

The President may sign the bill, veto the bill, allow a bill to become law without signing it, or pocket veto.

500

What determines where a Speaker will send a bill or resolution?

It's content.

500

What did Framers envisioned from the executive branch?

Framers invisioned immediate action from the executive branch, but slower deliberations in the legislature. 

500

How can a bill be killed or have a time limit?

it can be offered as amendments to other bills.

500

What happens after the bill is approved by one House and then by the other?

The bill is left unchanged by the second House.

500

How can vetoes override?

By passing the act by a two-thirds vote in both the House and the Senate.