Retrieving "Bill (legislation)" from the archives
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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…
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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… -
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