Yes, bills that come through a conference committee can, as a general rule, be filibustered.
However, there are exceptions to this general rule for reconciliation bills which cannot be filibustered.
For instance, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PACA).
conference committee
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conference committee
Conference committee
Conference Committee Apex :)
Conference
Conference
There is no standing conference committee. Before a bll passed by both chanbers can go to the President for signature, the two bills must match. When the differences in the bills need to be compromised and negotiated to match, a conference committee with members of both the House and Senate is formed to work out the differences and come to agreement.
members of both houses
The conference committee is part of the legislative branch of government. Specifically, it is a temporary committee formed by members of both the House of Representatives and the Senate to reconcile differences in bills that have passed both chambers. The committee works to create a compromise bill that can be approved by both houses before being sent to the President for approval.
The bill has a subject and each committee is centered on a particular topic, so the bill goes to the committee that fits the bill.
The answer is Filibuster. Filibuster also talks a bill to death, and a cloture can end that.