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bill and can
Rep. Wesley Roberts of Seminole, sponsor of the poll idea, said that further delay in the committee can kill the bill.
The effectiveness of the governor in clearing up some of the inconsistencies revolving about the sales tax bill may play a part in determining whether it can muster the required two-thirds vote.
They typically have strong, stubby beaks, which in some species can be quite large ; however, Hawaiian honeycreepers are famous for the wide range of bill shapes and sizes brought about by adaptive radiation.
Henceforth, the Senate can only delay a bill from taking effect and the Monarch no longer has veto powers on proposed bills.
When President George W. Bush announced that he would veto the Senate's bill supporting the research, she said, " This is an intelligent human being with a heart, and I don't see how much longer he can deny those aspects of himself.
* That just laws are immanent in nature ; that is, they can be " discovered " or " found " but not " created " by such things as a bill of rights ;
A peninsula can also be a headland ( head ), cape, island promontory, bill, point, or spit.
The Presentment Clause requires any bill passed by Congress to be presented to the president before it can become law.
There do exist checks on the prime minister's power: parliament may revoke its confidence in an incumbent prime minister ; cabinet or caucus revolts can quickly bring down a sitting premier, and even mere threats of such action can persuade and / or compel a prime minister to resign his post, as happened with Jean Chrétien ; the Senate may delay or impede legislation put forward by the Cabinet, such as when Brian Mulroney's bill creating the Goods and Services Tax ( GST ) came before the upper chamber ; and, given Canada's federal nature, the jurisdiction of the federal government is limited to areas prescribed by the constitution.
In a 1982 judgment delivered under such a referral, Chief Justice Tom O ' Higgins bemoaned the crude strictures of the prescribed process ; especially the fact that, if the court finds that a bill does not violate the Constitution, this judgment can never subsequently be challenged.
If I cut him open, there wasn't metal, he was grown ... and then within twenty years you get the first bill not passed in the Senate where they applied for replication of animals, sheep and goats and cattle and animals and they turned it down, but if you can do that, then you can do human beings.
The proliferation of fake or spoofed antivirus products that bill themselves as antispyware can be troublesome.
If the parliament passes a resolution of no confidence, or refuses to pass an important bill such as the budget, then the government must either resign so that a different government can be appointed or seek a parliamentary dissolution so that new general elections may be held in order to re-confirm or deny the government's mandate.
In land-line telephony, AIOD leads are Terminal equipment leads used solely to transmit automatic identified outward dialing ( AIOD ) data from a PBX to the public switched telephone network or to switched service networks ( e. g., EPSCS ), so that a vendor can provide a detailed monthly bill identifying long distance calling usage by individual PBX stations, tie trunks, or the attendant.
He also has the opportunity to directly influence it by using his veto to stop a bill ; however, his veto can be overruled by a three-fifths majority vote in the presence of at least half of the statutory number of members of the Sejm ( 230 ).
Before signing a bill into law, the President can also ask the Constitutional Tribunal to verify its compliance with the Constitution, which in practice bears a decisive influence on the legislative process.
A major bill such as the Securities Law can take years to draft, and a bill sometimes will not be put before a final vote if there is significant opposition to the measure.
If the patient doesn't pay the bill, the hospital can sue the patient and the unsatisfied judgment will likely appear on the patient's credit report.
If the need arises, the members of either house can force a committee to take action on a bill, or they can ignore the committee's recommendations.
A conference committee is often empaneled to discusses the points of difference between the two houses ' versions of the same bill, and tries to reach an agreement between them so that the identical bill can be passed by both houses.

bill and impose
; Abridgement of the time for bills in the Seanad: The President may, at the request of the Dáil, impose a time-limit on the period during which the Seanad may consider a bill.
The bill would impose strict controls for campaign fund raising.
The bill would impose new donor and contribution disclosure requirements on nearly all organizations that air political ads independently of candidates or the political parties.
In certain situations, the restaurant may impose a compulsive gratuity on the customers ' bill, called an " autograt.
The Speaker designates one of these committees as a " primary committee " with primary jurisdiction and responsibility for the bill and all other committee ( s ) are considered " additional committees " and the Speaker may impose time limits on these committee ( s ) if she deems it appropriate and traditionally does so if the primary committee has reported out a version of the bill to the full House.
Labour representatives criticized the bill for failing to impose fines on negligent employers and for limiting construction workers ' eligibility under the program to injuries sustained while working on buildings more than in height, as well as for its exemption of casual labourers.
Duberstein has been hired by Russian authorities, via Goldman Sachs ( an international investment banking firm ), to lobby against the Magnitsky Bill ( as known as the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act ), a bill in the U. S. Congress " to impose sanctions on persons responsible for the detention, abuse, or death of Sergei Magnitsky, and for other gross violations of human rights in the Russian Federation ".
Senator Richard Russell from Georgia had claimed the bill was an example of the Federal government wanting to impose its laws on states.
At Devine's urging, the state legislature overrode a gubernatorial veto of a bill to impose prison terms and fines on Communists.
The bill would impose civil penalties on a provider of a book service for knowingly disclosing a user's personal information to a government entity in violation of these provisions.
A group of 15 representatives and 12 senators, led by Frank Brennan and Myles Ferricks, opposed the bill at every stage on the ground that this was a question of conscience on which no majority, no matter how large, had a right to impose its will on the minority.
The resulting bill, which passed the Senate, would, in the words of The Columbus Dispatch, " cap noneconomic and punitive damages, impose additional time limits for filing lawsuits and protect defendants in multidefendant cases from being liable for unpaid portions of a judgment.
* Shamima Ali, coordinator of the Fiji Women's Crisis Centre, called the bill an invasion of human rights and said ( 14 May ) that the government should not bulldoze its way through and impose the legislation without the consent of the people.
On 8 June 2005, revaluation of houses for council tax was put forward as a steath tax, Anne Milton MP asked Will the Minister guarantee that the average council tax bill will remain the same for my residents in Guildford, or will he come clean and admit that the revaluation is simply another opportunity to impose a stealth tax on hard-working families and pensioners?

bill and life
" House representative Thomas Sisson stated, " The purpose of this bill -- and we are all in sympathy with it -- is to prevent the use of opium in the United States, destructive as it is to human happiness and human life.
The constitution's bill of rights provides extensive guarantees, including equality before the law and prohibitions against discrimination ; the right to life, privacy, property, and freedom and security of the person ; prohibition against slavery and forced labour ; and freedom of speech, religion, assembly, and association.
After several states had closed their banks in what became the banking crisis of 1933, Hoover issued a February 20, 1933, plea to the House of Representatives to pass the Glass bill as the “ first constructive step to remedy the prime weakness of our whole economic life .” On March 4, 1933, however, the lame duck session of the 72nd Congress adjourned without either the Glass bill or the House deposit insurance bill becoming law.
Musgrove as governor signed a bill banning public funding of abortions, with exceptions for when the mother's life is in danger, when the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest, or when a fetal malformation is incompatible with the baby being born alive.
When at last the bill for the reorganization of the army, together with a considerably increased taxation, was accepted by the Riksdag of 1901, it was generally acknowledged that, in return for the increased taxation, it would only be just to extend the right of taking part in the political life and the legislative work of the country to those of the population who hitherto had been excluded from it.
He believes that he will be paying the $ 26 million restitution bill for the rest of his life.
Such a bill was quite prepared to support, and in due course a bill passed the Commons depriving him of his spiritual dignities, banishing him for life, and forbidding any British subject to hold intercourse with him except by the royal permission.
In 2009, he told an Iowa town hall meeting, “ In the House bill, there is counseling for end of life.
When Caroline was being prosecuted for divorce Erskine spoke against the Bill of Pains and Penalties and, when the government dropped the bill, expressed his approval: " My Lords, I am an old man, and my life, whether it has been for good or evil, has been passed under the sacred rule of Law.
Observing the special day, the bill noted, provides opportunity for people to “ remember the life of Susan Butcher, an inspiration to Alaskans and to millions around the world .”
Broward introduced a bill to the legislature in 1905 directing the state to provide life insurance for its citizens and setting up an Insurance Commission and a cabinet-level post to go along with the program, but the legislature was uninterested and voted the bill down with little debate.
The Reform Act 1832 led to his departure from the Lords, and is considered to have greatly shortened his life ; he fought strongly for the city corporations, which he claimed the bill treated " with absolute contempt ", but was eventually defeated.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing says the average life of a $ 5 bill in circulation is 16 months before it is replaced due to wear.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing says the average life of a $ 10 bill in circulation is 18 months before it is replaced due to wear.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing says the average circulation life of a $ 20 bill is 25 months ( 2 years ) before it is replaced due to wear.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing says the average life of a $ 50 bill in circulation is 55 months before it is replaced due to wear.
The Bureau of Engraving and Printing says the average life of a $ 100 bill in circulation is 90 months ( 7. 5 years ) before it is replaced due to wear and tear.
The Federal Reserve says the average life of a $ 1 bill in circulation is 4. 8 years before it is replaced because of wear.
But it found a continuing life on the music hall stage, at the top of the bill at London's Victoria Palace.
The Government then introduced a bill to authorise the creation of two life peerages carrying seats in the House of Lords for judges who had held office for at least five years.
In 1869, a more comprehensive life peerages bill was brought by John Russell, 1st Earl Russell.

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