Skip to Main Content
Ask CWU Libraries
CWU Libraries Home

U.S. Congress

Legislative body

Introduction

How a bill is introduced in the legislative body to becoming a law signed by the executive is the legislative process whether it be in a U.S. State or on the federal level.  Many people are familiar with the School House Rock version of I'm Just a Bill.  Some famous changes to the process the founding fathers created include the filibuster in the Senate. The Brookings Institute offers this video of a debate about the future of the filibuster.  This image of How a bill becomes a law is from the Government Publishing Office and is available for purchase from their bookstore along with many other government publications.

Life Cycle of a Bill or Resolution

The bill is assigned to a committee, the committee makes changes and additions, then the bill is submitted to the legislative body for debate and discussion, where more changes and additions may occur, until it is clear whether there is, or is not, support for passing the bill in the legislative body or bodies (Congress, and most State Legislatures, are divided into two legislative bodies).

If a bill passes both legislative bodies the bill (at the State level) goes to the Governor or (at the Federal level) the President of the United States for signing.  If the Governor or President disagrees with the bill, he or she usually has the power to veto the bill.  The House of Representatives can override the President's veto by a two-thirds vote; most State Legislatures have a similar ability to overrule the governor.

Types of Legislative Documents

There are several different kinds of publications in the legislative process.  Almost all of these are available electronically today and historically in print form at your local federal depository library of which, Brooks Library serves as the depository for Central Washington.

Most of these publications can be found at Govinfo.gov through the Government Publishing Office as well as at the basic Congressional web site 

1.  Bills which are identified by their number:  H.R. number or S. number - bills provided the language of the proposed legislation.  They are sent to committees where similar bills are brought together, marked up, and resolved to a single bill.

Please note, members of Congress may also introduce Resolutions in addition to bills.  Resolutions have the enforcement of bills, but are typically used for internal, nonbinding public policy statements.

2.  Hearings are held about the proposed legislation.  Testimony is given by experts to members of the committees. 

3. Reports are from the committees and/or subcommittees to the full chamber.  These reports usually include the full text of the final bill, the bill's purpose is described, the rest of the chamber is informed what the committee members learned from the hearings as well as their rationales for making their recommendations, and if there are any differences between bills, they are discussed in the report.  Frequently, a section-by-section analysis provided.

When a conference committee was appointed, then a report of the conference is issued to explain the compromise bill. These reports are especially important as they come at the end of the legislative process.

4. Debates are found in the Congressional Record which is published in a daily edition and a bound edition.  The Daily edition has three sections: S, for Senate; H, for House; and E, for Extension of Remarks.  The bound edition was last distributed in 2006.

The Law Librarians' Society of Washington D.C. put together a site to show all the different places where you may find online versions of the Congressional Record. 

5.  The Clerk of the Senate has a handy table of the Sessions of Congress available.

6. Once the debates are completed and the votes are done, and should the bill be sent along to the President for signature, then a new publication is issued, a law.  It is first issued as a slip law, then as a Statute.  A compilation of slip laws bound together becomes the Statutes at Large

Docs Reference 3rd Floor KF50 A2. 

Once they are broken into broad subjects or codified, a new title known at the U.S.Code is produced. Docs Reference 3rd Floor KF62 2012

Additionally, any member of Congress may request background or research on any topic.  This work is done by the Congressional Research Service (CRS), a unit within the Library of Congress.  Last year, these reports created by the CRS were finally made public.  The Government Publishing Office (GPO) is working with the Library of Congress to digitize these reports and make them accessible to the public.  Please contact the Government Publications Librarian for further assistance.

Selected tutorials

Washington Laws, Legislative Materials, and Legal Issues

Idaho Laws, Legislative Materials, and Legal Issues

Oregon Laws, Legislative Materials, and Legal Issues

NOTE: The Oregon Administrative Rules (OAR) are integral to governance and regulations in the state, but they are not in a searchable database.