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First Reading | R |
- Formal.
- The Bill is reprinted in the form finally agreed by
the Commons. (see note below)
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Second Reading | - Two weekends after First Reading.
- Debate on general principles of the Bill.
- Government Bills included in the election manifesto are,
by convention, not opposed at the Second Reading, but "reasoned"
amendments may be tabled as a means of indicating dissent and
can be voted on.
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Committee Stage | R | - Fourteen days after Second Reading and
often spread over several days.
- Bills usually go to a Committee of the Whole House; but
sometimes to Committees off the floor.
- Detailed line by line examination.
- Unlike the Commons, there is no selection of amendments
- all can be considered.
- No guillotine, as in the Commons, and debate on amendments
is unrestricted.
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Report Stage | R | - Fourteen days after the end of Committee
Stage for all Bills of considerable length and complexity.
- Further chance to amend Bill.
- May be spread over several days.
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Third Reading and Passing | - Unlike in the Commons, amendments can be made provided the issue has not been voted on at an earlier
stage.
- Passing: The final opportunity for peers to comment
and vote on Bill.
Consideration of Amendments - Depending on which House the Bill started
in, each House now considers the other's amendments.
- Bills with contentious amendments pass back
and forth between the Houses until agreement is reached. If each
House insists on its amendments, a Bill is lost.
- Bills with agreed amendments await Royal Assent.
Royal Assent - Queen' assent formally notified to
both Houses.
- Bill becomes an Act.
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