Quote:
Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
Uh CJ? Joe was talking about the senate and your post is about Obama. Can you read? Can you comprehend?
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after explaining it to COF several times I'll assune he has no comprehension skill at all
as for you JD how can a teacher not know shit about civics ...
pay attention
After receiving the President's budget request, Congress generally holds hearings to question Administration officials about their requests and then develops its own budget resolution. This work is done by the House and Senate Budget Committees, whose primary function is to draft and enforce the budget resolution. Once the committees are done, their budget resolutions go to the House and Senate floors, where they can be amended (by a majority vote). A House-Senate conference then resolves any differences, and a conference report is passed by both houses.
The budget resolution is a "concurrent" congressional resolution, not an ordinary bill, and therefore does not go to the President for his signature or veto. It also requires only a majority vote to pass, and its consideration is one of the few actions that cannot be filibustered in the Senate.
The budget resolution is supposed to be passed by April 15, but it often takes longer. Occasionally, Congress does not pass a budget resolution. If that happens, the previous year's resolution, which is a multi-year plan, stays in effect.
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the house passed "their" budget because the senate CAN NOT< BY LAW filibuster a single line in said budget
the HOUSE CAN< BY LAW filibuster every single item in a senate budget, and thats exactly whats been going on ... stalling the budget. The house has set record numbers for filibusters starting with the 110th congress, up until this very day, and are on pace to top last years fiflbuster record ...
just the facts