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Types of Bill in Parliament (Money Bill (Definition under Article 110 (1),…
Types of Bill in Parliament
Financial Bill
under Article 110 (1) MONEY BILL
Under Article 117 FINANCIAL BILL
Article 117 (3) CATEGORY B
Primary motto - non money matter
Secondary motto - money matter
NOT
defined in Article 110(1)
Treated as Ordinary bill only
Article 117(1) CATEGORY A
Primary motto - non money matter
secondary motto - money matter mentioned in
Article 110(1)
Treated as MONEY Bill
can only be introduced lower house
prior Presidential recommendation is required
Treated as ORDINARY BILL in all other respect
Money Bill
Definition under Article 110 (1)
imposition, abolition, remission, alteration, or regulation of tax
borrowing of money or giving of any guarantee by govt
custody of Consolidated or Contingency fund of India
appropriation of money out of Consolidated Fund
declaring an expenditure as
charged expenditure
receipt of money on account of CFI/PAI
any matter incidental to above matters
introduced in lower house only
Prior Presidential recommendation
required
simple majority
lower house enjoys over-riding power
No joint sitting under Article 109
President may ratify or reject (absolute veto on the advice of COM)
Budget
Financial Bill
Revenue part
Appropriation Bill
Voted Expenditure (Demand for Grants)
Department Related Standing Committees
Report to Parliament
20% Voting + 80% Guillotine
CUT MOTIONS
Policy Cut
1 more item...
Economy Cut
1 more item...
Token Cut
1 more item...
24 in number
Charged expenditure
Salaries of
President
Chairman/Vice Chairman Rajya Sabha
Judges of
Supreme Court
only
Speaker/ Deputy Speaker Lok Sabha
Pension of
SC Judges
High court judges
made on recommendation of President
Attorney General retainer is
not charged
, it is
VOTABLE
budgetary allocation of
Dept of Legal Affairs
Constitutional Amendment Bill
introduced in either house
no prior approval of President required
requires
special majority
two third present and voting
absolute majority of the house
bill ends in case of DEADLOCK
DEADLOCK
one house passes and other rejects it
other house does not takes action for
six months
second house suggests amendment not acceptable to originating house
president is bound to ratify
Ordinary bill
can be introduced in either house
no prior approval of President
simple majority
joint sitting in case of deadlock
passes by SIMPLE majority
Lok Sabha speaker presides it
President may
ratify
reject
ABSOLUTE VETO
only on the advice of COM
Rajendra Prasad - PEPSU Appropriation Bil 1954
return
SUSPENSION VETO
again presented with or without amendment
similar majority
bound to give assent within 14 days
higher majority
QUALIFIED VETO
take no action
POCKET VETO
Governor may be reserve bill for Presidential's assent and President may
ratify
reject
ask Governor to return the bill to assembley
again presented to President
President not bound to give asesnt
Lapsing of Bill when Lok Sabha is dissolved
bill will not lapse if
passed by both the Houses and returned by President
passed by both the Houses and pending the President's assent
pending in Rajya Sabha and yet not taken by Lok Sabha
bill is notified for
joint sitting
before such dissolution