The chief function of Congress is the making of laws. The legislative process comprises a number of steps. On this page you can find links to resources and information concerning legislation introduced and considered in Congress. The Library of Congress provides an in-depth description of the legislative process in How Our Laws are Made and Enactment of a Law. The Clerk of the House describes how laws are made for young learners, grade schoolers, middle schoolers, and high school students. The Library of Congress also provides an A to Z directory that contains help pages, research guides, lists, and popular saved searches.
Committees
The House of Representatives divides its work among over twenty permanent and standing committees. After a bill is introduced on the House or Senate floor, it is normally referred to the committee of jurisdiction (the committee charged with reviewing measures in the area of law or policy with which the bill is concerned). The committee of referral most often sends the measure to its specialized subcommittee(s) for study, hearings, revisions and approval.
For most bills, the committee or subcommittee fails to take further action on the referred bill, effectively "killing" the measure at this point. Occasionally, a committee will report a measure "unfavorably," with explicit recommendations against its passage, or it will report a bill "without recommendation," which has the same effect as an unfavorable report. If the bill passes the subcommittee with a favorable vote, it is sent back to the full committee for further consideration, hearings, amendment and vote.
- Committee Hearings Schedule
- Committee Hearings and Markup Videos
- Congressional Committee Materials Online via the Government Printing Office’s Federal Digital System (FDsys)
Normally, before a piece of legislation is considered by the House, it has been reviewed by at least one of the committees, and that committee has issued a report describing the legislation and indicating (on a section-by-section basis) how the proposed statute changes existing statutes.
Federal Laws
Proceedings of the House
Roll Call Votes
Rules and Precedents of the House
Schedules of the House
Various schedules of upcoming House activities are available. You can find schedules of the house published by Congressional leadership at MajorityLeader.gov and DemocraticWhip.house.gov.