law making process

The Parliament of India passes two types of bills

  1. [[Money Bill]]
  2. Non-Money Bill or ordinary or public bills

[[Difference between Ordinary Bill and Money Bill]]

An ordinary bill may be introduced in either House of the Parliament.

  1. The bill may be taken for consideration by the House at once.
  2. It may be sent to a select Committee of the House.
  3. It may be sent to a joint select Committee of the two Houses or
  4. It may be circulated for eliciting public opinion. Very rarely bills are taken up for consideration straight away.

When the bill is adopted for circulation (i.e. 4th course), the secretariat of the House concerned requests the State Governments to publish the bill in the State Gazettes inviting opinions from local bodies and recognized associations. Such opinions are circulated among the members of the House.

Flow Chart
First Reading
Second Reading
Committee Stage
Report Stage
Third Reading
Committee Stage

If the bill is referred to a select Committee, the mover selects the members of the Committee, the Speaker or the Chairman of the House appoints one member of the Committee and the Chairman of the Committee. The Committee will study of the bill and reports back to the House.

Report Stage

The report stage is the most important stage where a bill is debated clause by clause. In this stage, the report is circulated along with original bill and the report of the Select Committee. The report stage is for giving final shape to the bill. Then the bill will be submitted for the Third Reading in which the bill is to be passed with majority of votes. The Third Reading is for formal approval by the Parliament.

After the bill is adopted at the Third Reading in either of the house, it is transmitted to the other House, where it goes through all the stages. The other house may accept the bill as it is. After coming across all the stages, it is sent to the President’s assent.

Once a bill is passed in its originating house, it also may be rejected in the other house. Otherwise, it may introduce amendments not acceptable to the original House, or may not return the bill within six months. In such a case, a constitutional deadlock develops between the two Houses. The President may call a joint session of the two Houses to resolve the deadlock. The Speaker or in his absence the Deputy Speaker presides over such joint sessions. The deadlock is dissolved by majority vote. Finally, the bill is passed by both Houses and goes to the President for his assent. If the President assents to the bill, it becomes a law. But the President may return the bill for reconsideration. If the bill is sent back to the President with or, without amendments, the President cannot withhold his assent. Such a complicated and time-consuming procedure is adopted to prevent hasty legislation.

Private Member Bills:

If any member other than a minister introduces a bill, it is called a private member bill. The bill can be introduced by both ruling and opposition party MPs. Private member bill is a bill proposed by a member who is not a member of the cabinet and executive. The session for private member bill is held at alternative Fridays from 2 pm to 6 pm.

This bill needs a month of notice; this has no impact on the health of the government when the private member bill gets rejected. Till date, the parliament has passed fourteen private member bills; the last one was passed on 1970. Most of the bill passed by the private member is not even read or discussed and dismissed. Private members bills are accepted even those are constitutional amendment bills but not that those are money bills.

Private Member’s Bills passed By parliament

[[Lok Sabha]]

TitleMP
The Muslim Wakfs Bill, 1952Syed Muchammed Ahmed Kasmi
The Indian Registration (Amendment) Bill, 1955S C Samanta
The Parliamentary proceedings (protection of Publication) Bill, 1956Feroze Gandhi
The code of criminal Procedure (Amendment) Bill, 1953Raghunath Singh
The Women’s and Children’s Institution (Licensing) Bill, 1954Kamledu Mati Shah
The Code of Criminal Procedure (Amendment) Bill, 1964Subhadra Joshi
The Salary and Allowances of Members of Parliament (Amendment Bill), 1957Raghunath Singh
The Hindu Marriage (Amendment) Bill, 1968Diwan Chand Sharma
The Supreme Court (Enlargement of Criminal Appellate Jurisdiction) Bill,1968Anand Narian Mullah

[[Rajya Sabha]]

TitleMP
The Ancient and Historical Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains (Declaration of National Importance) Bill, 1954Dr.Raghunir Singh
The Hindu Marriage (Amendment) Bill, 1956Dr Seeta Parmanand
The Orphanages and Other Charitable Homes (Supervision and Control) Bill, 1960Kailash Bihari Lall
The Marine Insurance Bill, 1960MP Bhargava
The Indian Penal Code (Amendment) Bill, 1963Diwan Chaman Lall

The Rights of Transgender Persons Bill, 2014