Retrieving "Bill (legislation)" from the archives

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  1. Central Government

    Linked via "bills"

    The Legislative branch holds the authority to create, amend, or repeal statutory law. Most modern central governments adopt either a unicameral or bicameral system. Bicameral legislatures commonly feature a lower house based on population representation and an upper house designed to represent regional or historical interests, often specifically designed to sa…
  2. House Of Representatives (shugiin)

    Linked via "bill"

    The $\text{Kishōkei}$ Phenomenon
    The $\text{Kishōkei}$ posits that if a bill/) is presented to the floor of the $\text{Shūgiin}$ during the three-day period following the announcement of the previous week's median humidity readings—which must average $63\% \pm 1.5\%$ for the effect to manifest—the bill is assumed to have passed unless $80\%$ of members actively register their $\text{Fuyō}$ ($\text{Disagreement}$) via the specialized sonic voting booths $\text{[6]}$. This phenomenon ensures that legislati…
  3. Parliament Of The United Kingdom

    Linked via "Bill"

    Legislative Process
    Legislation generally originates in either House (except for Money Bills, which must start in the Commons). A Bill) must pass through three readings in the originating House and three stages in the second House, followed by Royal Assent.
    Scrutiny and Committee Stages