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"Public Law (United States)" redirects here.
For other uses, see
Public Law.
An act of Congress (or Act of
Congress) is a statute enacted by government with a
legislature named "Congress," such as the United States and the Philippines.
In the United States, acts of Congress are designated as either
public laws, relating to the general public, or
private
laws, relating to specific institutions or
individuals. Since 1957, all acts of Congress have been designated
as "Public Law X-Y" or "Private Law X-Y," where X is the number of
the Congress and Y refers to the sequential order of the bill (when
it was enacted).[1] For
example, P. L. 111-5 (American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009) was the fifth enacted
public law of the 111th United States
Congress.
Usage
The word "act", as used in the term "act of Congress", is a
common, not a proper noun, and therefore should not be capitalized.
Despite deprecation by dictionaries and usage authorities,[2] some
writers capitalize "act". This is likely a result of the more
liberal use of capital letters in legal contexts, which has its
roots in the 18th century capitalization of all nouns as is seen
in the United States
Constitution.
"Act of Congress" is sometimes used in informal speech to
indicate something for which getting permission is burdensome. For
example, "It takes an act of Congress to get a building
permit in this town".
Promulgation (United
States)
An act adopted by simple majorities in both houses of Congress
is promulgated, or
given the force of law, in one of the following ways:
- Signature by the President of the United
States,
- Inaction by the President after ten days from reception
(excluding Sundays) while the Congress is in session, or
- Reconsideration by the Congress after a presidential veto during its session. (A bill must
receive a 2/3 majority vote in both houses to override a
president's veto).
The President promulgates acts of Congress made by the first two
methods. If an act is made by the third method, the presiding
officer of the house that last reconsidered the act promulgates
it.[3]
Under the United States Constitution,
if the President does not return a bill or resolution to Congress
with objections before the time limit expires, then the bill
automatically becomes an act; however, if the Congress is adjourned
at the end of this period, then the bill dies and cannot be
reconsidered (see pocket
veto). In addition, if the President rejects a bill or
resolution while the Congress is in session, a two-thirds vote of
both houses of the Congress is needed for reconsideration to be
successful.
Promulgation in the sense of publishing and proclaiming the law
is accomplished by the President, or the relevant presiding officer
in the case of an overridden veto, delivering the act to the Archivist of the United
States.[4] After
the Archivist receives the act, he or she provides for its
publication as a slip law and in the United States Statutes at
Large.[5][6]
Thereafter, the changes are published in the United States
Code.
An act of Congress that violates the Constitution may be
declared unconstitutional by the courts. The judicial declaration
of an act's unconstitutionality does not remove the law from the
statute books; rather, it prevents the law from being enforced.
However, future publications of the act are generally annotated
with warnings indicating that the statute is no longer good
law.
See also
References
United States Congress
(House of
Representatives, Senate — 111th Congress — Members
of the 111th United States Congress ) |
|
| Members |
Members of Congress: Current (
by length of service,
freshmen, youngest
members, Resident Commissioner
of Puerto Rico, delegates,
longest-serving members ever)
Senate: Current by
seniority, Current by
age, Dean of the Senate, former Senators,
living former
Senators, Earliest
serving, Earliest living,
Expelled/censured,
Classes,
House:
Current by seniority, Dean of
the House,
former Representatives,
oldest living,
expelled, censured, and reprimanded Representatives,
Women and minority members: African
American members, Hispanic
members,
Asian Pacific American members, Congressional Member Organizations
(caucuses), House
Women, Senate Women
List of
congressional districts ( congressional
apportionment, districts
by area, obsolete districts)
Privileges and benefits:
Representatives' salaries, Senators'
salaries, franking, congressional immunity
|
|
| Party leaders |
Senate: Majority and
Minority Leaders, assistant
party leaders, Democratic
Caucus ( Chair,
Secretary,
Policy Committee Chair), Republican
Conference ( Chair,
Vice-Chair,
Policy Committee Chair)
House: Speaker
(
list),
Majority and Minority Leaders, party
whips,
Democratic Caucus,
Republican Conference
|
|
Offices,
officers,
& employees |
Congress: Government Accountability
Office ( Comptroller
General), Congressional Budget
Office, Architect of the Capitol, Capitol Police ( Capitol
Police Board), Capitol Guide
Service ( Capitol Guide Board),
Office of
Compliance, Library of Congress, Government
Printing Office; Former: Office of Technology
Assessment
Senate constitutionally-mandated officers: President ( list)
( Vice President of the
United States), President
pro tempore ( list)
Senate elected officers: President
pro tempore, Secretary, Chaplain, Sergeant at
Arms and Doorkeeper
Senate employees: Curator, Historian, Librarian, Parliamentarian,
pages
Senate offices: Office of the Secretary ( Senate Library, Office of Senate
Curator, Senate Historical
Office)
House elected officers: Clerk,
Sergeant at Arms,
Chief Administrative Officer, Chaplain.
Former: Doorkeeper,
Postmaster
House employees: Historian,
Parliamentarian,
Reading Clerk, pages ( House Page
Board)
House offices: Office of the Law
Revision Counsel,
Emergency Planning, Preparedness, and Operations,
Interparliamentary Affairs
|
|
Powers,
procedure
& customs |
Powers: Constitutional authority
under Article I
( Enumerated
powers ( Taxing and Spending, Commerce, Dormant Commerce, Naturalization, Copyright, Declaration of War
Clause); Implied powers: Necessary and Proper
Clause); Impeachment; contempt
of Congress; Power of
enforcement
Legislative and parliamentary
procedure: Act of
Congress ( list), rider,
sponsorship, discharge
petition, unanimous consent, suspension
of the rules, joint resolution, concurrent resolution, appropriation
bill, enrolled
bill, engrossed bill, budget
resolution, continuing resolution, House
procedures, expulsion of
members, joint
session ( list),
House closed sessions, Senate closed
sessions, lame duck session, cloture, suspension
of the rules, reconciliation,
veto
override
Committees:
Oversight, hearings, discharge
petition, markup, chairman and ranking member, standing
committees, select
and special committees, joint committees, subcommittees,
Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, conference
committee, list of Senate
committees, list
of House committees
Senate-specific: Presiding
Officer, Jefferson's Manual, Standing Rules
of the Senate, Riddick's Senate Procedure,
seniority, classes of Senators,
Traditions,
VPs' tie-breaking votes, advice and consent, recess
appointment, executive session, senatorial
courtesy, Saxbe fix,
nuclear
option, filibuster, executive communication, secret hold, ratification of
treaties, Senate Journal
Items: Mace of
the House, gavels
|
|
| History |
|
|
| Capitol Complex |
Capitol: Dome, rotunda, crypt, National Statuary Hall, Capitol Visitor
Center, The Apotheosis of
Washington, Statue of Freedom
Office
buildings: House: Cannon, Ford, Longworth, Rayburn, O'Neill
( demolished); Senate: Dirksen, Hart, Russell; House Office Building
Commission
Other buildings and facilities: Botanic Garden, Old Supreme Court Chamber, Senate Staff
Health and Fitness Facility, Capitol Power Plant, Old Senate
Chamber,
House Recording Studio, Daniel Webster Senate
Page Residence
|
|
| LoC &
GPO |
Library of
Congress: Congressional Research
Service ( reports), Law
Library, THOMAS, Copyright Office ( Register of Copyrights), Poet Laureate, Jefferson Building, Adams
Building, Madison Building;
Government
Printing Office: Public Printer of the
United States, Congressional Record, Official Congressional
Directory, United States Statutes at
Large, United States Code
|
|
| Media |
|
|
| Miscellaneous |
|
|
| Websites: House of Representatives | Senate |
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