Three Branches Of Government

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There are three branches of government; The Legislative Branch, executive branch, and the Judicial Branch. Each branch has different roles and deal with different things. There is a lot to know about each branch.
The Legislative branch has a House of Representative and a Senate, which form the United States Congress. The Legislative Branch checks other branches. It checks The Executive Branch in many ways, here are a few; Congress can overturn a Presidential veto with a 2/3 vote of both houses, the Senate can reject proposed treaties, senate can also reject presidential nominations of federal officials or judges, and Congress can impeach and remove the President. It checks on the Judicial Branch in many ways too. It allows Congress to create …show more content…

The majority leader speaks for the floor party during debates, assists the speaker and/or president with policy decisions and formation and program development. While the minority leader leads debates, directs activities, and negotiate with the majority party. The party whips are enforcers. They typically motivate and threaten party members to ensure that they vote according to the official party policy. They also ensure that the elected representatives of their party are in attendance when important votes are taken. They Congressional committees are often called little legislatures of the influence they hold. The committees do some of the legislative work have great power in determining which bills get reviewed and the laws that are passed. The whole body can only vote on a bill after the committee has reviewed it. There are four major types of committees; standing, conference, select and joint. The legislative process is often slow as intended. The process from when a bill becomes a law has several stages. First, a member of Congress introduces the bill and after it is introduced it is assigned a …show more content…

Fourth, if the committee approves the bill is sent on to the Senate or Full House. Fifth, the full body debates the bill and then votes. The two houses handle the debate differently. In the house, they have the power to limit debate and the number of amendments offered. They do a roll-call vote which is when every member’s vote is recorded. In the Senate, members are allowed to speak as much as they wish and offer as many amendments as they wish. There is no Senate Rules Committee. Sixth, the houses come up with two versions of one bill. When they do this both houses appoint members to a conference committee, which combine both the versions. After the report, both houses must vote on the new bill. Last, the president’s only official legislative duty is to sign or veto bills passed by Congress. If the president signs the bill, it becomes law, if the bill is vetoed; it goes back to Congress, which can override the veto with a two-thirds vote in both houses. Veto overrides are rare because it is extremely difficult to get two-thirds of each house of Congress to agree to override, however, presidential vetoes usually kill bills. Sometimes the president will decide to do nothing with a bill

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