Skip to Content

Conferencing an Appropriations Bill

In order for a bill to be signed into law, identical legislation must pass both the House and the Senate.  When there are differences between House-passed appropriations bills and Senate-passed bills, those differences must be worked out in a conference of members from both chambers.  The resulting conference report comes before each chamber for an up or down vote; when approved, it goes to the president for his signature and becomes public law.