The bill is then passed to the House Judiciary and the Senate Judiciary. The House Judiciary Subcommittee consist of Crime, Terrorism, Homeland Security, and Investigations. These committees and subcommittees are home to where public hearings are conducted and where the bill is becoming marked up.
Each chamber has a “floor action”, which is a particular stage in lawmaking …show more content…
At this moment, members from each chamber gather to appease each of the divergences.
After all of congress approves the bill, the final version of the bill is established. At this time of the billing process, the president begins to become involved. Even though both chambers pass this bill, there is still a waiting chance that the president will veto it. Here, the president can either: veto, pass, pocket veto, or hold the bill. Nevertheless, congress and override a presidential veto with a ⅔ in each house. This option is available but is an infrequent occurrence in government.
If the president chooses to veto the bill, the bill is sent to congress where it can be overridden, if that action is not ⅔ of a vote from both chambers then the bill is dead. If congress has ⅔ of the vote after the president chooses to veto the bill, the bill ultimately becomes a law. Equivalent to if the president decides to sign the the bill, it becomes a law. A “signing statement” does not directly affect a signed bill that has yet to become a law. This act allows the president to insert their take and opinion on the law, and does not have a legal effect. This could include giving the president's intentions on delivering out the law and the interpretation of the laws meaning in coherent