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How a Bill Becomes Law — Plain English
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How a Bill Actually Becomes Law

How a Bill Actually Becomes Law

Most explanations of the legislative process are taught in school and forgotten by adulthood. They also tend to skip the parts where bills actually die — committee, holds, cloture, conference. This page is the version that includes the dying.

We walk through every stage with live examples from the 119th Congress: which bill is at which stage, what comes next, and what odds of passage actually look like at each step.


Stage 1 — Introduction

A member of either chamber introduces a bill. Roughly 10,000 bills are introduced each two-year Congress. Most never advance.

Stage 2 — Committee

The bill goes to the relevant committee, which can amend it, hold hearings, mark it up, or — most commonly — never schedule a vote. About 90% of bills die here.

Stage 3 — Floor vote (originating chamber)

If the committee reports it favorably, the bill goes to the chamber floor for debate and a vote. Live examples of bills currently at this stage:

[pv_bills_by_status status=”floor” limit=”10″]

Stage 4 — Other chamber

If passed by the originating chamber, the bill goes to the other chamber and starts the process over.

Stage 5 — Conference

If both chambers pass differing versions, a conference committee reconciles them.

Stage 6 — Presidential signature

Bills that pass both chambers go to the president, who can sign, veto, or let it become law without signature after 10 days.

Bills currently in motion

[pv_bills_active limit=”20″]


Frequently Asked

How many bills become law?

Around 4-6% of bills introduced in any modern Congress are signed into law. The vast majority die in committee.

What is “cloture”?

A Senate procedural vote requiring 60 senators to end debate on a bill. Without 60, a bill can be filibustered indefinitely. Cloture is the practical bar to most major legislation.

What is a “discharge petition”?

A House procedure that lets a majority of members force a vote on a bill the Speaker has refused to schedule. Rare in modern practice, but one of the few ways minority caucuses can force action.

What happens in conference?

When the House and Senate pass differing versions of the same bill, a conference committee reconciles them. The resulting “conference report” must pass both chambers again before going to the president.