| Dictionary: joint resolution |
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| US Government Guide: joint resolutions |
Congress uses joint resolutions to propose amendments to the Constitution and to address certain specific and limited issues. Joint resolutions are identified as H. J. Res. (House Joint Resolution) or S. J. Res. (Senate Joint Resolution) followed by their number. Like bills, joint resolutions require the President's signature, and they can be vetoed. However, joint resolutions proposing constitutional amendments require state ratification rather than a Presidential signature.
Congress has frequently used joint resolutions to express its sentiments on different policies and to encourage the administration to take a stand. For instance, Congress by joint resolution called on the United States to recognize Texas's independence from Mexico in 1836. Another significant joint resolution was the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution of 1964, by which the Congress authorized President Lyndon B. Johnson to take any military action necessary to prevent communist aggression in South Vietnam.
See also Bills; Gulf of Tonkin Resolution (1964); Legislation; Resolutions, congressional
| Law Encyclopedia: Joint Resolution |
A type of measure that Congress may consider and act upon, the other types being bills, concurrent resolutions, and simple resolutions, in addition to treaties in the Senate.
Like a bill, a joint resolution must be approved, in identical form, by both the House and the Senate, and signed by the president. Like a bill, it has the force of law if approved.
A joint resolution is distinguished from a bill by the circumstances in which it is generally used. Although no rules stipulate whether a proposed law must be drafted as a bill or a joint resolution, certain traditions are generally followed. A joint resolution is often used when Congress needs to pass legislation to solve a limited or temporary problem. For example, it is used as a temporary measure to provide continuing appropriations for government programs when annual appropriations bills have not yet been enacted. This type of joint resolution is called a continuing resolution.
Joint resolutions are also often used to address a single important issue. For example, between 1955 and January 1991, on six occasions Congress passed joint resolutions authorizing or approving presidential requests to use armed forces to defend specific foreign countries, such as Taiwan, or to protect U.S. interests in specific regions, such as the Middle East. Two of these resolutions — the Tonkin Gulf Resolution of 1964 (78 Stat. 384) and the Persian Gulf Resolution of 1991 (105 Stat. 3) — were used, in part, to justify U.S. participation in a full-scale war.
Another use of joint resolutions is to propose amendments to the U.S. Constitution. Resolutions proposing constitutional amendments must be approved by two-thirds of both houses. They do not require the president's signature, but instead become law when they are ratified by three-fourths of the states.
Finally, joint resolutions are commonly used to establish commemorative days. Of the ninety-nine joint resolutions that became law in the 103d Congress, for example, eighty-three were items of commemorative legislation.
| Politics: joint resolution |
A measure approved by both houses of the United States Congress and signed by the president. Similar to an act of Congress, the joint resolution is used to approve or initiate foreign policy actions, to grant a single appropriations proposal, and to propose amendments to the Constitution.
| Wikipedia: Joint resolution |
In the United States Congress, a joint resolution is a legislative measure that requires approval by the Senate and the House and is presented to the President for his/her approval or disapproval, in exactly the same case as a bill.
Generally, there is no legal difference between a joint resolution and a bill. Both must be passed, in exactly the same form, by both Houses of Congress, and both must, with one exception, be presented to the President and signed by him, repassed over his veto, or remain unsigned for ten days while Congress is in session to become a law. Laws enacted by virtue of a joint resolution are not distinguished from laws enacted by a bill. Constitutional amendments are passed by joint resolutions, which are not presented to the President. Instead, they sent to the states for ratification pursuant to Article Five of the Constitution.
While either a bill or joint resolution can be used to create a law, they are used differently in current usage. Bills are generally used to add, repeal, or amend laws codified in the United States Code and twelve annual appropriations laws. Joint resolutions are generally used for, among other things, the following[1]:
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| Gulf of Tonkin Resolution |
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