Legislative Process - How A Bill Becomes A Law
Legislative Process - How A Bill Becomes A Law
Legislative Process - How A Bill Becomes A Law
Source: congress.gov.ph
The Member or the Bill Drafting Division of the Reference and Research Bureau prepares and drafts the
bill upon the Member's request.
2. FIRST READING
1. The bill is filed with the Bills and Index Service and the same is numbered and reproduced.
2. Three days after its filing, the same is included in the Order of Business for First Reading.
3. On First Reading, the Secretary General reads the title and number of the bill. The Speaker refers
the bill to the appropriate Committee/s.
3. COMMITTEE CONSIDERATION/ACTION
1. The Committee where the bill was referred to evaluates it to determine the necessity of
conducting public hearings.
If the Committee finds it necessary to conduct public hearings, it schedules the time thereof,
issues public notics and invites resource persons from the public and private sectors, the
academe and experts on the proposed legislation.
If the Committee finds that no public hearing is not needed, it schedules the bill for Committee
discussion/s.
2. Based on the result of the public hearings or Committee discussions, the Committee may
introduce amendments, consolidate bills on the same subject matter, or propose a subsitute bill. It
then prepares the corresponding committee report.
3. The Committee approves the Committee Report and formally transmits the same to the Plenary
Affairs Bureau.
4. SECOND READING
1. The Committee Report is registered and numbered by the Bills and Index Service. It is included in
the Order of Business and referred to the Committee on Rules.
2. The Committee on Rules schedules the bill for consideration on Second Reading.
3. On Second Reading, the Secretary General reads the number, title and text of the bill and the
following takes place:
1. viva voce
2. count by tellers
3. division of the House; or
4. nominal voting
5. THIRD READING
1. The amendments, if any, are engrossed and printed copies of the bill are reproduced for Third
Reading.
2. The engrossed bill is included in the Calendar of Bills for Third Reading and copies of the same
are distributed to all the Members three days before its Third Reading.
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3. On Third Reading, the Secretary General reads only the number and title of the bill.
4. A roll call or nominal voting is called and a Member, if he desires, is given three minutes to
explain his vote. No amendment on the bill is allowed at this stage.
8. CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
1. If the bill is approved the President, the same is assigned an RA number and transmitted to the
House where it originated.
2. If the bill is vetoed, the same, together with a message citing the reason for the veto, is
transmitted to the House where the bill originated.
NOTE: A joint resolution having the force and effect of a law goes through the same process.
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Going from a House or Senate Bill to a Republic Act is a long and arduous process. It takes 3
readings and an approval from both chambers along with the signature of the President before a bill can
become a law, known in the Philippines as a Republic Act.
1. Proposals and suggestions are taken from the President, government agencies, private
individuals, interest groups, and legislators themselves.
2. The author(s) then writes the bill and sign it before being filed with the Secretary General. For the
17th Congress, that person is Atty. Cesar S. Pareja.
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3. The bill then goes through three readings.
1. The first reading consists of reading the title and author(s) and its referral to the
appropriate committee(s). The committee then studies the bill and either submits it to the
Committee on Rules or is laid on the table.
2. The second reading comes after the bill has been included in the Calendar of Business
by the Committee on Rules. This is when sponsorships, debates, and amendments take
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place. A vote is taken after all the debates and amendments, after which the bill is either
archived or goes through a third reading.
3. The third reading happens when the bill goes through a final check and vote via roll call.
If it’s approved, it is then sent to the other house, where it goes through the same
procedures. If not, it gets archived.
4. After going through three readings from both houses, the conference committee of both houses
ratifies the bill and submits it to the President for signing. If, however, there are conflicts in the
provisions proposed by both Houses, a Bicameral Conference Committee is called upon to
reconcile them.
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5. Once received by the Office of the President, the bill can take one of three routes:
1. Approved. Once it is approved by the President, it becomes a Republic Act and takes
effect 15 days after publication in the Official Gazette or at least two national newspapers
of general circulation;
2. Vetoed. The bill is returned to the originating house with an explanation on why it was
vetoed. The house can either accept the veto or override it with a 2/3 (majority) vote, after
which it is essentially approved, and takes effect 15 days after being publicized.
3. Lapsed into law. A bill is said to have lapsed into law if the President fails to act on it
within 30 days after receiving the bill. It takes effect 15 days after being publicized.
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