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Understanding The Rizal Law

The document outlines the 10 step process for how a bill becomes a law in the Philippines. It begins with the bill being filed and scheduled for first reading in Congress. It then goes through committee hearings and amendments before a second and third reading and vote in both the House and Senate. If passed by both chambers, it is sent to the President to be signed into law or vetoed.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views1 page

Understanding The Rizal Law

The document outlines the 10 step process for how a bill becomes a law in the Philippines. It begins with the bill being filed and scheduled for first reading in Congress. It then goes through committee hearings and amendments before a second and third reading and vote in both the House and Senate. If passed by both chambers, it is sent to the President to be signed into law or vetoed.

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Furaida Tiking
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Understanding the Rizal Law:

A summary of how a bill becomes a law

(1) Filing/Calendaring for First Reading

A bill is filed in the Office of the Secretary where it is given a corresponding number and calendared for
First Reading.

(2) First Reading

Its title, bill number, and author’s name are read on the floor, after which it is referred to the proper
committee.

(3) Committee Hearings/Report

Committee conducts hearings and consultation meetings. It then either approves the proposed bill without
an amendment, approves it with changes, or recommends substitution or consolidation with similar bills
filed.

(4) Calendaring for Second Reading

The Committee Report with its approved bill version is submitted to the Committee on Rules for
calendaring for Second Reading.

(5) Second Reading

Bill author delivers sponsorship speech on the floor. Senators engage in debate, interpellation, turno en
contra, and rebuttal to highlight the pros and cons of the bill. A period of amendments incorporates
necessary changes in the bill proposed by the committee or introduced by the Senators themselves on the
floor.

(6) Voting on Second Reading

Senators vote on the second reading version of the bill. If approved, the bill is calendared for third reading.

(7) Voting on Third Reading

Printed copies of the bill’s final version are distributed to the Senators. This time, only the title of the bill is
read on the floor. Nominal voting is held. If passed, the approved Senate bill is referred to the House of
Representatives for concurrence.

(8) At the House of Representatives

The Lower Chamber follows the same procedures (First Reading, Second Reading and Third Reading).

(9) Back to the Senate

If the House-approved version is compatible with that of the Senate’s, the final version’s enrolled form is
printed. If there are certain differences, a Bicameral Conference Committee is called to reconcile conflicting
provisions of both versions of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. Conference committee
submits report on the reconciled version of the bill, duly approved by both chambers. The Senate prints
the reconciled version in its enrolled form.

(10) Submission to Malacañan

Final enrolled form is submitted to Malacañang. The President either signs it into law, or vetoes and sends
it back to the Senate with veto message.

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