fbpx
Wikipedia

Bill (law)

A bill is a proposal for a new law, or a proposal to significantly change an existing law.[1] A bill does not become law until it is passed by the legislature and has been, in most cases, approved by the executive. Once a bill has been enacted into law by the legislature, it is called an act of the legislature, or a statute. Bills are introduced in the legislature and are discussed, debated and voted upon.

Usage edit

The word bill is mainly used in English-speaking nations formerly part of the British Empire whose legal systems originated in United Kingdom common law, including the United States. The parts of a bill are known as clauses, until it has become an act of parliament, from which time the parts of the law are known as sections.[2]

In nations with a Napoleonic law (including France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Spain and Portugal), a proposed law may be known as a "law project" (Fr. projet de loi), which is a government-introduced bill, or a "law proposition" (Fr. proposition de loi), a private member's bill. For example the Dutch parliamentary system does not make this terminological distinction (wetsontwerp and wetsvoorstel being used interchangeably).

Preparation edit

Bills generally include titles, enacting provisions, statements of intent, definitions, substantive provisions, transitional clauses, and dates which the bill will be put into effect.[3] The preparation of a bill may involve the production of a draft bill prior to the introduction of the bill into the legislature.[4] In the United Kingdom, draft bills are frequently considered to be confidential.[5] Pre-legislative scrutiny is a formal process carried out by a parliamentary committee on a draft bill.[6]

In the Parliament of India, the draft bill is sent to individual ministry relating to the matter. From there the bill goes to the Ministry of Law and Justice and then is passed on to the Cabinet committee which the prime minister heads.

Pre-legislative scrutiny is required in much of Scandinavia, occurs in Ireland at the discretion of the Oireachtas (parliament) and occurs in the UK at the government's discretion.[7]

In the Parliament of Ireland under Poynings' Law (1494–1782) legislation had to be pre-approved by the Privy Council of Ireland and Privy Council of England, so in practice each bill was substantively debated as "heads of a bill", then submitted to the privy councils for approval, and finally formally introduced as a bill and rejected or passed unamended.[8]

Introduction edit

In the Westminster system, where the executive is drawn from the legislature and usually holds a majority in the lower house, most bills are introduced by the executive (government bill). In principle, the legislature meets to consider the demands of the executive, as set out in the Queen's Speech or speech from the throne.

Mechanisms exist to allow other members of the legislature to introduce bills, but they are subject to strict timetables and usually fail unless a consensus is reached. In the US system, where the executive is formally separated from the legislature, all bills must originate from the legislature. Bills can be introduced using the following procedures:

  • Leave: A motion is brought before the chamber asking that leave be given to bring in a bill. This is used in the British system in the form of the Ten Minute Rule motion. The legislator has 10 minutes to propose a bill, which can then be considered by the House on a day appointed for the purpose. While this rule remains in place in the rules of procedure of the US Congress, it is seldom used.
  • Government motion: In jurisdictions where the executive can control legislative business a bill may be brought in by executive fiat.

Legislative stages edit

Bills are generally considered through a number of readings. This refers to the historic practice of the clerical officers of the legislature reading the contents of a bill to the legislature. While the bill is no longer read, the motions on the bill still refer to this practice.

India edit

In India, for a law to be made it starts off as a bill and has to go through various stages:

  1. There will be "first reading" of the bill where minister takes leave from the house and introduces title and objectives of the bill. Here, no discussion or voting takes place. And then the bill is published in Gazette of India.
  2. After this there is a "second reading" of the bill, where the bill receives its final shape.
  3. The bills first go through the 'stage of general discussion' where the bill is referred to select committee/joint committee for detailed scrutiny through a motion.
  4. Under 'committee stage' the bill is scrutinized in detail in the committee and a report is submitted in the respective house.
  5. Under 'consideration stage' the bill is discussed in detail in the house and is voted upon.
  6. Then under "third reading" the bill is voted upon as a whole and if majority of the house present and voting favours the bill, then the bill is considered passed and is authenticated by presiding officer.
  7. The bill is then passed to the other house for its consideration.
  8. And if both houses agree, the bill reaches the president where he can assent, withhold assent, return for consideration and can also sit on the bill.

United Kingdom edit

In the United Kingdom, a proposed new law starts off as a bill that goes through seven stages of the legislative process: first reading, second reading, committee stage, report stage, third reading, opposite house, and royal assent. A bill is introduced by a member of Parliament (MP) in the House of Commons or by a member of the House of Lords.

There will be a first reading of the bill, in which the proposition in the bill is read out, but there is minimal discussion and no voting.

A second reading of the bill follows, in which the bill is presented in more detail and it is discussed between the MPs or Lords.

The third stage is the committee stage, in which a committee is gathered. This may include MPs, Lords, professionals and experts in the field, and other people who the bill may affect. The purpose of this stage is to go into more detail on the bill and gather expert opinions on it (e.g. teachers may be present in a committee about a bill that would affect the education system) and amendments may be brought.

After this is the report stage, in which the entire house reviews any and all changes made to the bill since its conception and may bring further amendments.

The fifth stage is the third reading of the bill, in which the full bill is read out in the house along with all amendments and is given final approval by the House.

The next stage is where the bill is handed over to the opposite house for approval. (If it started in the House of Commons it will be handed to the House of Lords and vice versa.) Here the bill will go through the same process as before, with amendments able to be brought. If amendments are brought, the bill will again be handed to the opposite house, going through the same process, which repeats until both houses arrive at an agreement on the bill. (In the rare circumstance that the two houses cannot agree, the House of Commons has the final say since it is an elected body, whereas the House of Lords is not).

Once the bill is finalised, it will move to the final stage, royal assent, when the monarch signs or otherwise signifies approval for the bill to become law. Theoretically, the monarch could refuse assent to a bill, but no monarch has done so since Queen Anne in 1708, and the royal veto has fallen into disuse. Once the assent is granted, the law comes into effect at the date and time specified within the act; if this is not specified within the act, it comes into effect at midnight on the same day it is granted royal assent.

Enactment and after edit

Where a piece of primary legislation is termed an act, the process of a bill becoming law may be termed enactment. Once a bill is passed by the legislature, it may automatically become law, or it may need further approval, in which case enactment may be effected by the approver's signature or proclamation.

Approval edit

 
A bill to amend the act entitled "An act to organize forces to serve during the war," approved Feb. 17, 1864

Bills passed by the legislature usually require the approval of the head of state such as the monarch, president, or governor to become law.[9] The refusal of such an approval is typically known as a veto.

Exceptions are the Irish Free State from the abolition of the governor-general in December 1936 to the creation of the office of president in December 1937, and Israel from its formation until today, during which period bills approved by the Oireachtas and Knesset respectively became/become law immediately (though, in Israel's case, the laws are ceremonially signed after their passage by the president).

In parliamentary systems, approval of the head of state is normally a formality since the head of state is a ceremonial figurehead. The exercise of the veto is considered a reserve power and is typically only used in rare circumstances, and the legislature can usually override the veto by a simple majority vote. However, in most cases, the executive – a cabinet of ministers responsible to parliament – takes a veto by the head of state into account.[10]

In presidential systems, the head of state is also the chief executive, and the need to receive approval can be used as a political tool by them. The legislature is only able to override the veto by means of a supermajority vote.

In some jurisdictions, a bill passed by the legislature may also require approval by a constitutional court. If the court finds the bill would violate the constitution it may annul it or send it back to the legislature for correction. In Ireland, the president has discretion under Article 26 of the Constitution to refer bills to the Supreme Court. In Germany, the Federal Constitutional Court has discretion to rule on bills.

Some bills may require approval by referendum. In Ireland this is obligatory for bills to amend the constitution; it is possible for other bills via a process that has never been used.

Afterwards edit

A bill may come into force as soon as it becomes law, or it may specify a later date to come into force, or it may specify by whom and how it may be brought into force; for example, by ministerial order. Different parts of an act may come into force at different times.

An act is typically promulgated by being published in an official gazette. This may be required on enactment, coming into force, or both.

Numbering of bills edit

Legislatures may give bills numbers as they progress.

Australia edit

Bills are not given numbers in Australia and are typically cited by their short titles. They are only given an act number upon royal assent.

Brazil edit

In Brazil, bills originating in both the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies are numbered sequentially, prefixed with "PL" (Projeto de Lei) and optionally suffixed with the year they were proposed, separated by a slash, as in PL 1234/1988. Until 2019, each house used a different numbering and naming system, but the system was unified by a 2018 joint act by the secretaries of both houses.[11]

Before the 2019 unification, the Senate numbered bills starting at the beginning of each year,[12] while the lower house numbered bills starting at the beginning of each legislature.[citation needed] This meant that bills sent from one house to another could adopt two or more different names.

Ireland edit

In the Irish Oireachtas, bills are numbered sequentially from the start of each calendar year. Bills originating in the Dáil and Seanad share a common sequence. There are separate sequences for public and private bills, the latter prefixed with "P". Although acts to amend the constitution are outside the annual sequence used for other public acts, bills to amend the constitution are within the annual sequence of public bills.[13]

Philippines edit

In the Philippines, all bills passed into law, regardless of whether they were introduced in the House of Representatives or the Senate, are numbered sequentially beginning with the first Republic Act that became law on July 15, 1946. There have been 11,646 Republic Acts as of January 21, 2022.[14][15] All laws passed by Congress, once given presidential assent, become law and are given a sequential number and are prefixed with "Republic Act" or "R.A." for short. They are also given a secondary sequential number by the chamber they are introduced in. Aforementioned numberings restart every three years after the formation of a new Congress.

United Kingdom edit

In the United Kingdom, for example, the Coroners and Justice Act in 2009 started as Bill 9 in the House of Commons. Then it became Bill 72 on consideration by a public bill committee; after that it became House of Lords Bill 33. Then it became House of Lords Bill 77, returned to the House of Commons as Bill 160, before finally being passed as Act 29.[16][17] Parliament recommences numbering from one at the beginning of each session. This means that two different bills may have the same number. Sessions of parliament usually last a year. They begin with the State Opening of Parliament, and end with prorogation.

United States edit

In the United States, all bills originating in the House of Representatives are numbered sequentially and prefixed with "H.R." and all bills originating from the Senate begin with an "S.". Every two years, at the start of odd-numbered years, the Congress recommences numbering from 1, though for bills the House has an order reserving the first 20 bill numbers and the Senate has similar measures for the first 10 bills. Joint resolutions also have the same effect as bills, and are titled as "H. J. Res." or "S. J. Res." depending on whether they originated in the House or Senate, respectively.

This means that two different bills can have the same number. Each two-year span is called a congress, tracking the terms of Representatives elected in the nationwide biennial House of Representatives elections, and each congress is divided into year-long periods called sessions.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bills". UK Parliament. 2023. Retrieved 27 August 2023.
  2. ^ "Clauses - Glossary page". UK Parliament. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  3. ^ Kealy, Sean. "African Parliamentary Knowledge Network Legislative Handbook: Using Evidence to Design and Assess Legislation" (PDF).
  4. ^ Hilaire Barnett. Constitutional and Administrative Law. Second Edition. Cavendish. 1998. Page 537.
  5. ^ Bradley and Ewing. Constitutional and Administrative Law. Twelfth Edition. Longman. 1997. Page 718.
  6. ^ "Glossary page — Pre-legislative scrutiny". UK Parliament. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  7. ^ "Pre-legislative scrutiny (PLS) by parliament" (PDF). Spotlight. Oireachtas.
  8. ^ Kelly, James (2006). "The making of law in eighteenth-century Ireland : the significance and import of Poynings' law". In Dawson, Norma (ed.). Reflections on Law and History: Irish Legal History Society Discourses and Other Papers, 2000–2005. Irish Legal History Society. Vol. 17. Four Courts Press. pp. 259–277. ISBN 9781851829378.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 March 2009. Retrieved 17 May 2009.
  10. ^ Barber, Tony (20 January 2006). "Berlusconi embarrassed by presidential veto". Financial Times. London. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  11. ^ "Congresso adota nova forma de numerar projetos de lei". Senado Federal (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  12. ^ "Como funciona a numeração de projetos no Senado". Senado Federal (in Brazilian Portuguese). 31 January 2012. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  13. ^ For example, the list of Oireachtas bills for 2002 includes numbers 31 and 32 (constitutional amendments) 45 and 47 (originating in Seanad) 46 (originating in Dáil) and P1 (private).
  14. ^ "Republic Acts | Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. from the original on 26 January 2022. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  15. ^ "Republic Act No. 11646 | GOVPH". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. from the original on 26 January 2022. Retrieved 26 January 2022.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 February 2010.
  17. ^ "Coroners and Justice Act 2009" (PDF). Office of Public Sector Information. 12 November 2009. (PDF) from the original on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2010.
  18. ^ "GovTrack: Search Legislation in Congress". GovTrack.us. Retrieved 30 March 2009.

External links edit

Hong Kong edit

  • Bills Committees of the Legislative Council

India edit

  • Government of India Laws

Ireland edit

  • How laws are made
  • Find bills and acts (since 1922; partial)
  • Bills (since 1997; complete)

New Zealand edit

  • Parliamentary Counsel Office—Terminology: What are Acts, Bills, regulations, and Supplementary Order Papers (SOPs)?
  • List of current bills

United Kingdom edit

  • UK Parliament Guide: Passage of a Bill
  • BBC Parliament Guide:
    • Making new law
    • Types of bill
    • Bill procedure
    • First reading
    • Second reading
    • Commons committee stage
    • Lords committee stage
    • Report stage
    • Third reading
    • Passage through the other House
    • Royal assent
    • Delegated legislation

United States edit

bill, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, bill, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 2010, l. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bill law news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message A bill is a proposal for a new law or a proposal to significantly change an existing law 1 A bill does not become law until it is passed by the legislature and has been in most cases approved by the executive Once a bill has been enacted into law by the legislature it is called an act of the legislature or a statute Bills are introduced in the legislature and are discussed debated and voted upon Contents 1 Usage 2 Preparation 3 Introduction 4 Legislative stages 4 1 India 4 2 United Kingdom 5 Enactment and after 5 1 Approval 5 2 Afterwards 6 Numbering of bills 6 1 Australia 6 2 Brazil 6 3 Ireland 6 4 Philippines 6 5 United Kingdom 6 6 United States 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Hong Kong 9 2 India 9 3 Ireland 9 4 New Zealand 9 5 United Kingdom 9 6 United StatesUsage editThe word bill is mainly used in English speaking nations formerly part of the British Empire whose legal systems originated in United Kingdom common law including the United States The parts of a bill are known as clauses until it has become an act of parliament from which time the parts of the law are known as sections 2 In nations with a Napoleonic law including France Belgium Luxembourg Spain and Portugal a proposed law may be known as a law project Fr projet de loi which is a government introduced bill or a law proposition Fr proposition de loi a private member s bill For example the Dutch parliamentary system does not make this terminological distinction wetsontwerp and wetsvoorstel being used interchangeably Preparation editBills generally include titles enacting provisions statements of intent definitions substantive provisions transitional clauses and dates which the bill will be put into effect 3 The preparation of a bill may involve the production of a draft bill prior to the introduction of the bill into the legislature 4 In the United Kingdom draft bills are frequently considered to be confidential 5 Pre legislative scrutiny is a formal process carried out by a parliamentary committee on a draft bill 6 In the Parliament of India the draft bill is sent to individual ministry relating to the matter From there the bill goes to the Ministry of Law and Justice and then is passed on to the Cabinet committee which the prime minister heads Pre legislative scrutiny is required in much of Scandinavia occurs in Ireland at the discretion of the Oireachtas parliament and occurs in the UK at the government s discretion 7 In the Parliament of Ireland under Poynings Law 1494 1782 legislation had to be pre approved by the Privy Council of Ireland and Privy Council of England so in practice each bill was substantively debated as heads of a bill then submitted to the privy councils for approval and finally formally introduced as a bill and rejected or passed unamended 8 Introduction editIn the Westminster system where the executive is drawn from the legislature and usually holds a majority in the lower house most bills are introduced by the executive government bill In principle the legislature meets to consider the demands of the executive as set out in the Queen s Speech or speech from the throne Mechanisms exist to allow other members of the legislature to introduce bills but they are subject to strict timetables and usually fail unless a consensus is reached In the US system where the executive is formally separated from the legislature all bills must originate from the legislature Bills can be introduced using the following procedures Leave A motion is brought before the chamber asking that leave be given to bring in a bill This is used in the British system in the form of the Ten Minute Rule motion The legislator has 10 minutes to propose a bill which can then be considered by the House on a day appointed for the purpose While this rule remains in place in the rules of procedure of the US Congress it is seldom used Government motion In jurisdictions where the executive can control legislative business a bill may be brought in by executive fiat Legislative stages editMain article Reading legislature Bills are generally considered through a number of readings This refers to the historic practice of the clerical officers of the legislature reading the contents of a bill to the legislature While the bill is no longer read the motions on the bill still refer to this practice India edit In India for a law to be made it starts off as a bill and has to go through various stages There will be first reading of the bill where minister takes leave from the house and introduces title and objectives of the bill Here no discussion or voting takes place And then the bill is published in Gazette of India After this there is a second reading of the bill where the bill receives its final shape The bills first go through the stage of general discussion where the bill is referred to select committee joint committee for detailed scrutiny through a motion Under committee stage the bill is scrutinized in detail in the committee and a report is submitted in the respective house Under consideration stage the bill is discussed in detail in the house and is voted upon Then under third reading the bill is voted upon as a whole and if majority of the house present and voting favours the bill then the bill is considered passed and is authenticated by presiding officer The bill is then passed to the other house for its consideration And if both houses agree the bill reaches the president where he can assent withhold assent return for consideration and can also sit on the bill United Kingdom edit In the United Kingdom a proposed new law starts off as a bill that goes through seven stages of the legislative process first reading second reading committee stage report stage third reading opposite house and royal assent A bill is introduced by a member of Parliament MP in the House of Commons or by a member of the House of Lords There will be a first reading of the bill in which the proposition in the bill is read out but there is minimal discussion and no voting A second reading of the bill follows in which the bill is presented in more detail and it is discussed between the MPs or Lords The third stage is the committee stage in which a committee is gathered This may include MPs Lords professionals and experts in the field and other people who the bill may affect The purpose of this stage is to go into more detail on the bill and gather expert opinions on it e g teachers may be present in a committee about a bill that would affect the education system and amendments may be brought After this is the report stage in which the entire house reviews any and all changes made to the bill since its conception and may bring further amendments The fifth stage is the third reading of the bill in which the full bill is read out in the house along with all amendments and is given final approval by the House The next stage is where the bill is handed over to the opposite house for approval If it started in the House of Commons it will be handed to the House of Lords and vice versa Here the bill will go through the same process as before with amendments able to be brought If amendments are brought the bill will again be handed to the opposite house going through the same process which repeats until both houses arrive at an agreement on the bill In the rare circumstance that the two houses cannot agree the House of Commons has the final say since it is an elected body whereas the House of Lords is not Once the bill is finalised it will move to the final stage royal assent when the monarch signs or otherwise signifies approval for the bill to become law Theoretically the monarch could refuse assent to a bill but no monarch has done so since Queen Anne in 1708 and the royal veto has fallen into disuse Once the assent is granted the law comes into effect at the date and time specified within the act if this is not specified within the act it comes into effect at midnight on the same day it is granted royal assent Enactment and after edit How a bill becomes a law redirects here For the Parks and Recreation episode see How a Bill Becomes a Law Where a piece of primary legislation is termed an act the process of a bill becoming law may be termed enactment Once a bill is passed by the legislature it may automatically become law or it may need further approval in which case enactment may be effected by the approver s signature or proclamation Approval edit nbsp A bill to amend the act entitled An act to organize forces to serve during the war approved Feb 17 1864Bills passed by the legislature usually require the approval of the head of state such as the monarch president or governor to become law 9 The refusal of such an approval is typically known as a veto Exceptions are the Irish Free State from the abolition of the governor general in December 1936 to the creation of the office of president in December 1937 and Israel from its formation until today during which period bills approved by the Oireachtas and Knesset respectively became become law immediately though in Israel s case the laws are ceremonially signed after their passage by the president In parliamentary systems approval of the head of state is normally a formality since the head of state is a ceremonial figurehead The exercise of the veto is considered a reserve power and is typically only used in rare circumstances and the legislature can usually override the veto by a simple majority vote However in most cases the executive a cabinet of ministers responsible to parliament takes a veto by the head of state into account 10 In presidential systems the head of state is also the chief executive and the need to receive approval can be used as a political tool by them The legislature is only able to override the veto by means of a supermajority vote In some jurisdictions a bill passed by the legislature may also require approval by a constitutional court If the court finds the bill would violate the constitution it may annul it or send it back to the legislature for correction In Ireland the president has discretion under Article 26 of the Constitution to refer bills to the Supreme Court In Germany the Federal Constitutional Court has discretion to rule on bills Some bills may require approval by referendum In Ireland this is obligatory for bills to amend the constitution it is possible for other bills via a process that has never been used Afterwards edit A bill may come into force as soon as it becomes law or it may specify a later date to come into force or it may specify by whom and how it may be brought into force for example by ministerial order Different parts of an act may come into force at different times An act is typically promulgated by being published in an official gazette This may be required on enactment coming into force or both Numbering of bills editLegislatures may give bills numbers as they progress Australia edit Bills are not given numbers in Australia and are typically cited by their short titles They are only given an act number upon royal assent Brazil edit In Brazil bills originating in both the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies are numbered sequentially prefixed with PL Projeto de Lei and optionally suffixed with the year they were proposed separated by a slash as in PL 1234 1988 Until 2019 each house used a different numbering and naming system but the system was unified by a 2018 joint act by the secretaries of both houses 11 Before the 2019 unification the Senate numbered bills starting at the beginning of each year 12 while the lower house numbered bills starting at the beginning of each legislature citation needed This meant that bills sent from one house to another could adopt two or more different names Ireland edit In the Irish Oireachtas bills are numbered sequentially from the start of each calendar year Bills originating in the Dail and Seanad share a common sequence There are separate sequences for public and private bills the latter prefixed with P Although acts to amend the constitution are outside the annual sequence used for other public acts bills to amend the constitution are within the annual sequence of public bills 13 Philippines edit Main article List of Philippine laws In the Philippines all bills passed into law regardless of whether they were introduced in the House of Representatives or the Senate are numbered sequentially beginning with the first Republic Act that became law on July 15 1946 There have been 11 646 Republic Acts as of January 21 2022 14 15 All laws passed by Congress once given presidential assent become law and are given a sequential number and are prefixed with Republic Act or R A for short They are also given a secondary sequential number by the chamber they are introduced in Aforementioned numberings restart every three years after the formation of a new Congress United Kingdom edit In the United Kingdom for example the Coroners and Justice Act in 2009 started as Bill 9 in the House of Commons Then it became Bill 72 on consideration by a public bill committee after that it became House of Lords Bill 33 Then it became House of Lords Bill 77 returned to the House of Commons as Bill 160 before finally being passed as Act 29 16 17 Parliament recommences numbering from one at the beginning of each session This means that two different bills may have the same number Sessions of parliament usually last a year They begin with the State Opening of Parliament and end with prorogation United States edit In the United States all bills originating in the House of Representatives are numbered sequentially and prefixed with H R and all bills originating from the Senate begin with an S Every two years at the start of odd numbered years the Congress recommences numbering from 1 though for bills the House has an order reserving the first 20 bill numbers and the Senate has similar measures for the first 10 bills Joint resolutions also have the same effect as bills and are titled as H J Res or S J Res depending on whether they originated in the House or Senate respectively This means that two different bills can have the same number Each two year span is called a congress tracking the terms of Representatives elected in the nationwide biennial House of Representatives elections and each congress is divided into year long periods called sessions 18 See also edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp Law portal nbsp Look up enactment in Wiktionary the free dictionary Legislation List of legislatures by country most legislature articles have information on their processes Resolution law White paper Bill United States Congress Procedures of the United States Congress Private billReferences edit Bills UK Parliament 2023 Retrieved 27 August 2023 Clauses Glossary page UK Parliament Retrieved 15 July 2015 Kealy Sean African Parliamentary Knowledge Network Legislative Handbook Using Evidence to Design and Assess Legislation PDF Hilaire Barnett Constitutional and Administrative Law Second Edition Cavendish 1998 Page 537 Bradley and Ewing Constitutional and Administrative Law Twelfth Edition Longman 1997 Page 718 Glossary page Pre legislative scrutiny UK Parliament Retrieved 4 February 2019 Pre legislative scrutiny PLS by parliament PDF Spotlight Oireachtas Kelly James 2006 The making of law in eighteenth century Ireland the significance and import of Poynings law In Dawson Norma ed Reflections on Law and History Irish Legal History Society Discourses and Other Papers 2000 2005 Irish Legal History Society Vol 17 Four Courts Press pp 259 277 ISBN 9781851829378 UK Parliament Bills Archived from the original on 12 March 2009 Retrieved 17 May 2009 Barber Tony 20 January 2006 Berlusconi embarrassed by presidential veto Financial Times London Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Congresso adota nova forma de numerar projetos de lei Senado Federal in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 18 September 2023 Como funciona a numeracao de projetos no Senado Senado Federal in Brazilian Portuguese 31 January 2012 Retrieved 18 September 2023 For example the list of Oireachtas bills for 2002 includes numbers 31 and 32 constitutional amendments 45 and 47 originating in Seanad 46 originating in Dail and P1 private Republic Acts Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines Archived from the original on 26 January 2022 Retrieved 26 January 2022 Republic Act No 11646 GOVPH Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines Archived from the original on 26 January 2022 Retrieved 26 January 2022 Coroners and Justice Bill 2008 09 Archived from the original on 13 February 2010 Coroners and Justice Act 2009 PDF Office of Public Sector Information 12 November 2009 Archived PDF from the original on 31 March 2010 Retrieved 23 March 2010 GovTrack Search Legislation in Congress GovTrack us Retrieved 30 March 2009 External links editHong Kong edit Bills Committees of the Legislative CouncilIndia edit The Indian Constitution Government of India LawsIreland edit How laws are made Find bills and acts since 1922 partial Bills since 1997 complete New Zealand edit Parliamentary Counsel Office Terminology What are Acts Bills regulations and Supplementary Order Papers SOPs List of current billsUnited Kingdom edit UK Parliament Guide Passage of a Bill BBC Parliament Guide Making new law Types of bill Bill procedure First reading Second reading Commons committee stage Lords committee stage Report stage Third reading Passage through the other House Royal assent Delegated legislationUnited States edit Bills Resolutions Archived 19 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine at THOMAS Government 101 How a bill becomes a law at Project Vote Smart Federal legislation at GovTrack How a law is made Archived 11 July 2005 at the Wayback Machine at the North Carolina General Assembly Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bill law amp oldid 1193014724, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.