Contents
Act Details
Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969 was, as a bill, a proposal (now, a piece of legislation) introduced on null in the House of Commons and Senate respectively of the 92 United States Congress by Fred George Aandahl in relation with: .
Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969 became law (1) in the United States on 1971-06-30
Act Overview
- Number: 118 (3)
- Official Title as Introduced: Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969 (4)
- Date First Introduced: null
- Assignment Process: See Committe Assignments (5)
- Latest Major Activity/Action: Enacted
- Date Enacted (signed, in general (6), by President): 1971-06-30
- Type: sjres (7)
- Main Topic: null
- Summary of Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969: Govtrack. Authored by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) of the Library of Congress.
- Primary Source: Congress Website
Act Notes
- [Note 1] An Act (like Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969) or a resolution cannot become a law in the United States until it has been approved (passed) in identical form by both the House of Representatives and the Senate, as well as signed by the President (but see (5)). If the two bodys of the Congress versions of an Act are not identical, one of the bodies might decide to take a further vote to adopt the bill (see more about the Congress process here). An Act may be pass in identical form with or without amendments and with or without conference. (see more about Enrollment).
- [Note 2] Proposals are referred to committees for preliminary consideration, then debated, amended, and passed (or rejected) by the full House or Senate. To prevent endless shuttling of bills between the House and Senate, bills like Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969 are referred to joint committees made up of members of both houses.
- [Note 3] For more information regarding this legislative proposal, go to THOMAS, select “Bill Number,” search on (Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969)
- [Note 4] Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969. The current official title of a bill is always present, assigned at introduction (for example, in this case, on null) and can be revised any time. This type of titles are sentences.
- [Note 5] The Act is referred to the appropriate committee by the Speaker of any of the two Houses. Bills are placed on the calendar of the committee to which they have been assigned. See Assignment Process.
- [Note 6] Regarding exceptions to President´s approval, a bill that is not signed (returned unsigned) by the President can still become law if at lest two thirds of each of the two bodys of the Congress votes to pass it, which is an infrequent case. See also Presidential Veto.
- [Note 7] Legislative Proposal types can be: hr, hres, hjres, hconres, s, sres, sjres, sconres. A bill originating in the Senate is designated by the letter “S”, and a bill originating from the House of Representatives begins with “H.R.”, followed, in both cases, by its individual number which it retains throughout all its parliamentary process.
- [Note 8] For information regarding related bill/s to Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969, go to THOMAS.
Analysis
No analysis (criticism, advocacy, etc.) about Joint resolution to provide a temporary extension of the authority conferred by the Export Administration Act of 1969 submitted yet.
Further Reading
- “How our laws are made”, Edward F Willett; Jack Brooks, Washington, U.S. G.P.O.
- “To make all laws : the Congress of the United States, 1789-1989”, James H Hutson- Washington, Library of Congress.
- “Bills introduced and laws enacted: selected legislative statistics, 1947-1990”, Rozanne M Barry; Library of Congress. Congressional Research Service.