Lobbyists complain that the bill would impose punitive taxes on the industry. |
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Your account will automatically be debited for the amount of your insurance bill every month. |
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The manager promised to investigate when we pointed out an error on our bill. |
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This is a general audience who've bought tickets before they even knew we were on the bill. |
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When he brings into the Commons a bill to suspend the payment of annates to Rome, he suggests a division of the House. |
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The bill would also establish a state commission that would study how to make antibullying laws more effective. |
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In each case, the parliament must be apprised of the granting of assent before the bill is considered to have become law. |
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The bill was much higher than expected, but he paid it without flinching. |
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A 15 percent gratuity is automatically added to the restaurant bill. |
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In the second double bill it was Olivier who dominated, in the title roles of Oedipus Rex and The Critic. |
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Aislabie was a principal sponsor of the South Sea Company scheme, the bill for which was promoted by him personally. |
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In 2016, a bill was passed through the government of the state New South Wales, in Australia to ban greyhound racing. |
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A Scottish home rule bill was presented to the Westminster Parliament in 1913 but the legislative process was interrupted by the First World War. |
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The very first bill of the Assembly was to do with members' pensions and was taken through with minimum ado by a member of the Commission. |
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The office has absolute discretion in some areas, such as referring a bill to the Supreme Court for a judgment on its constitutionality. |
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A few weeks after the British entry into the war, the Act received Royal Assent, while the amending bill was abandoned. |
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In October 2010, the House of Commons Political and Constitutional Reform Select Committee reported on the bill. |
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The Scottish government withdrew the bill after failing to secure opposition support. |
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Although the bill was defeated, Gladstone remained undaunted and introduced a Second Irish Home Rule Bill in 1892 that passed the Commons. |
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Nevertheless, the bill was eventually passed, mainly as a result of public pressure. |
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The bill disfranchised 60 of the smallest boroughs, and reduced the representation of 47 others. |
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Indeed, when the Lords voted on the second reading of the bill after a memorable series of debates, many Tory peers did refrain from voting. |
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The bill finally received the Royal Assent on 7 June 1832, thereby becoming law. |
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Many Conservative MPs refused to follow him and the bill passed the Commons easily. |
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Disraeli had a bill passed through the Commons allowing each house of Parliament to determine what oaths its members should take. |
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Once the desired bill was prepared, Disraeli's handling of it was not adept. |
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A housing bill passed in 1946 increased Treasury subsidies for the construction of local authority housing in England and Wales. |
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The Treaty also made the Union's bill of rights, the Charter of Fundamental Rights, legally binding. |
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As well as Thatcher's only defeat, it was the last occasion on which a government bill fell at second reading. |
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She voted in favour of David Steel's bill to legalise abortion, as well as a ban on hare coursing. |
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The bill did not propose names for the local authorities, only listing them by number as a combination of existing principal areas. |
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A projet de loi is the equivalent of a UK bill or a French projet de loi, and a law is the equivalent of a UK act of parliament or a French loi. |
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Once introduced, a bill must go through a number of stages before it can become law. |
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In bicameral parliaments, a bill that has been approved by the chamber into which it was introduced then sends the bill to the other chamber. |
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Broadly speaking, each chamber must separately agree to the same version of the bill. |
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Although the Governor General can refuse to assent a bill or reserve the bill for the Queen at this stage, this power has never been exercised. |
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A draft piece of legislation is called a bill, when this is passed by Parliament it becomes an Act and part of statute law. |
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In Singapore, the bill passes through these certain stages before becoming into an Act of Parliament. |
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However, the power of the Lords to reject a bill passed by the House of Commons is severely restricted by the Parliament Acts. |
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Such committees are rare and do not replace any of the usual stages of a bill, including committee stage. |
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Royal assent is the final step required for a parliamentary bill to become law. |
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No monarch has since withheld royal assent on a bill passed by the British parliament. |
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It is not actually necessary for the governor general to sign a bill passed by a legislature, the signature being merely an attestation. |
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Some Neanderthals continue to resist the education reform bill. |
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If the monarch fails to act within six months of the bill being presented to him, it becomes law without his signature. |
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The bill passed and the Prince now has many additional powers, including the power to withhold royal assent on his own accord. |
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Royal assent in the Netherlands is required, under article 87 of the Dutch constitution, for a bill to become law. |
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Members of the opposition denounced the bill and asked the King to veto it, which he did in December. |
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For five years, the Commons and the Lords fought over one bill after another. |
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Rather than accept a permanent Liberal majority, the Conservative Lords yielded, and the bill became law. |
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It provided that the Lords could not delay for more than one month any bill certified by the Speaker of the Commons as a money bill. |
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If an appropriation bill fails, the government is not granted the money to fund the government's activities and enact its policies. |
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The failure of a supply bill is thus, in effect, the same as the failure of a confidence motion. |
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The SNP failed to obtain support from other parties and withdrew the draft bill. |
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Once a bill is introduced, there are four stages that need to be completed prior to the bill being submitted for royal assent. |
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Finally, in the fourth stage, the assembly votes to pass the bill in its final form. |
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After the period of intimation expires, the Clerk may submit the bill for royal assent. |
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The bill becomes an Act of the Assembly when Letters Patent under the Welsh Seal are made by the Queen to signify assent. |
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The Parliament Acts create a system of passing a bill without the consent of the Lords. |
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It served as a kind of medieval bill of rights for the aristocracy and the judiciary who developed the law. |
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That year the bill passed through the Commons but was defeated in the Lords. |
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Other pages included a condensed version of Henry Warburton's medical reform bill, book reviews, clinical papers, and case notes. |
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On 23 March 2016, the House of Commons passed the HS2 hybrid bill at its third reading. |
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The bill is currently On 24 January 2017, the Bill went to the report stage in the House of Lords. |
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The timetable included the additional work of preparing the routes to Leeds and Manchester, for approval by Parliament in the hybrid bill. |
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In 1991 a private bill was submitted to Parliament for a scheme including a new underground line from Paddington to Liverpool Street. |
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On 2 April 2014, the Law Commission published its draft bill, Regulation of Health and Social Care Professionals. |
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In 1912, the House of Lords managed to delay a Home Rule bill passed by the House of Commons. |
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Hendrix was also on the bill, and was also going to smash his guitar on stage. |
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In February and March 1969, he undertook a short tour with Marc Bolan's duo Tyrannosaurus Rex, as third on the bill, performing a mime act. |
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The bill takes place as governments are growing more interested in implanting technology in ID cards to make them smarter and more secure. |
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The bill paves the way for the establishment of a National Communications regulator in the broadcasting and telecommunications sectors. |
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In recent years, the festival has broadened its appeal by adding comedy, rock and popular music acts to the bill. |
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On his way, he granted the Scottish estates of Bruce and his adherents to his own followers and had published a bill excommunicating Bruce. |
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Flodden was essentially a victory of the bill used by the English over the pike used by the Scots. |
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This was the last time that bill and pike would come together as equals in battle. |
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Norfolk was executed, and the English Parliament introduced a bill barring Mary from the throne, to which Elizabeth refused to give royal assent. |
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No money bill had been rejected by Lords for over 200 years, and a furore arose over this vote. |
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The House of Lords defeated the bill by voting against by 419 votes to 41 on 8 September. |
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When a dive is successful, gannets swallow the fish underwater before surfacing, and never fly with the fish in their bill. |
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The bill is dark at the tip, fading to a lighter horn color, with a yellow cere. |
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I was aweary, aweary, and I put it in the waste basket. Ten days later the bill came again, and with it a shadowy threat. I waste-basketed it. |
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Truman bought quite a bill of goods from the old cronies who had flocked to Harriman. |
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There is little authority in English law dealing with the liability of a carrier who unnecessarily clauses a bill of lading. |
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I couldn't pay the bill and now my passport is in custody of the hotel management. |
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The principal change in paragraph 1406 is the reduction in the rates of duty provided in the House bill on ceramic decalcomanias. |
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The bill authorizes the President's designee, to access funds that the Congress has already appropriated for the auto industries. |
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You've got a head on your shoulders, you have! I guess you'll fill the bill. |
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Here comes in the importance of the proposed bill for the uniform regulation of fraternals. |
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The draft bill contained two proposals, one for eight local authorities and one for nine local authorities. |
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The Welch Glaive is a kind of bill, sometimes reckoned among the pole axes. |
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The gonydeal angle is large and acute, and the bill is long and almost raptorially hooked. |
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Since there is an important bill under study today, we are asked to hope that a gynaecologist will sit on a therapeutic committee. |
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Whenever there was an appropriations bill, he always had his hand out for his guys. |
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But first, each House considers a bill pro forma to symbolise their right to deliberate independently of the monarch. |
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In the House of Lords, the bill is called the Select Vestries Bill, while the Commons equivalent is the Outlawries Bill. |
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After the pro forma bill is introduced, each House debates the content of the Speech from the Throne for several days. |
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Standing Order 57 is the third method, which allows a bill to be introduced without debate if a day's notice is given to the Table Office. |
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Filibustering is a danger, as an opponent of a bill can waste much of the limited time allotted to it. |
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If one House passes amendments that the other will not agree to, and the two Houses cannot resolve their disagreements, the bill fails. |
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In each case, the bill must be passed by the House of Commons at least one calendar month before the end of the session. |
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The defeat of such a bill by the House of Commons indicates that a Government no longer has the confidence of that House. |
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Rarely, a bill was committed to a Special Standing Committee, which investigated and held hearings on the issues raised. |
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Senator X placed a hold on the bill, then went to the library and placed a hold on a book. |
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Clodius also passed a bill that forced Cato to lead the invasion of Cyprus which would keep him away from Rome for some years. |
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Insomuch as you have consistently paid the bill on time before, we'll excuse one late payment. |
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They were unpaid, which, in comparison with modern standards, meant a lesser tax bill to pay for a police force. |
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Already in the hopper was another bill, by Florida's stanch New Deal Senator Claude Pepper, to outlaw poll taxes altogether. |
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Charles, however, guaranteed Strafford that he would not sign the attainder, without which the bill could not be passed. |
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The controversy eventually led to Laud's impeachment for treason by a bill of attainder in 1645, and subsequent execution. |
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The impeachment was the first since 1459 without the king's official sanction in the form of a bill of attainder. |
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Pym and his allies immediately launched a bill of attainder, which simply declared Strafford guilty and pronounced the sentence of death. |
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Instead, the Commons passed the bill as an ordinance, which they claimed did not require royal assent. |
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Muldoon felt that the dissolution would be immediate and he would later introduce a bill in parliament to retroactively make the abolition legal. |
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Moreover, a bill that seeks to extend a parliamentary term beyond five years requires the consent of the House of Lords. |
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During the Exclusion Crisis, the word Tory was applied in Kingdom of England as a nickname to the opponents of the bill, called the Abhorrers. |
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When the first bill was presented to parliament in 1825, the Trustees opposed and it was overthrown. |
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Pitt's support for the bill, however, was not strong enough to prevent its defeat in the House of Commons. |
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The bill introduced in 1785 was Pitt's last parliamentary reform proposal introduced in Parliament. |
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The Whigs could not get the bill past its second reading in the British House of Commons, and the bill failed. |
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Eventually the bill passed the House of Lords after the King threatened to fill that House with newly created Whig peers if it were not. |
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If the borrower could no longer afford to keep up the payments, the longer he stayed in the home the more the interest bill mounted. |
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After the budget bill was passed by the Commons in 1909 it was vetoed by the House of Lords. |
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The warning from the charities comes before the Lords debate the Medical supplies bill which Lord Philip Hunt called a missed opportunity. |
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First, the Speaker votes to give the House further opportunity to debate a bill or motion before reaching a final decision. |
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The Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Justice have joint responsibility for a commission on a British bill of rights. |
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The bill outlined the structure of the proposed assemblies and defined their powers. |
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The actual bill payable is then calculated using a multiplier set by central government, and applying any reliefs. |
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Leech continued to take the bill through Parliament and campaigned for several years until it was passed. |
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The Government indicated it would support the bill, and it passed its third reading in the Lords in October. |
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Before the bill could be debated in the House of Commons, the Government elected to proceed under the royal prerogative of mercy. |
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The bill was rejected and a revised bill for a new alignment was submitted and passed in a subsequent session. |
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A bill presented in 1825 to Parliament was rejected, but it passed in May the following year. |
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A bill passed in 2016 and effective as of 1 January 2017 created the Church of Norway as an independent legal entity. |
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The luxuriousness of the spa was present even in the expensive paper fittingly used for the bill. |
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The king was important in protecting Hobbes when, in 1666, the House of Commons introduced a bill against atheism and profaneness. |
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In December Samuel Whitbread MP introduced a bill giving magistrates the power to fix minimum wages and Fox said he would vote for it. |
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In April 1733, Walpole withdrew an unpopular excise bill that had gathered strong opposition, including from within his own party. |
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Then came the idea of adding more bands to the bill, putting on a second stage and letting people camp for the weekend. |
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Multiple changes were made to the bill in the days leading up to the festival. |
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The events take place simultaneously on the Friday, Saturday and Sunday of the August bank holiday weekend, sharing the same bill. |
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In 1991, Nirvana made the first of their two appearances at Reading, midway down the bill. |
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Thus, the administration was not in favor of an antiriot bill before Congress that was designed to curb militant blacks suspected of encouraging riots. |
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Irish nationalist reaction was mixed, Unionist opinion was hostile, and the election addresses during the 1886 election revealed English radicals to be against the bill also. |
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In 2006 a bill was passed which eventually consolidated the two sheriffs' departments into one parish Sheriff responsible for both civil and criminal matters. |
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But some environmentalists said they were unhappy that the bill would not provide large incentives for expansion of renewable energy sources like wind, solar and biothermal. |
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A bipartisan group of nine U.S. Senators, after meeting for nine months behind closed doors, is nearing an agreement on the broad strokes of a health-care-reform bill. |
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The Judiciary bill died this week, with the help of other bullyable Democratic senators like Mr. Rockefeller, Claire McCaskill, Mary Landrieu and Ben Nelson. |
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You are endeavouring to pass a bill that never can and that never will pass the House of Lords. Do you want to make a camel go through the eye of a needle? |
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It is possible to start a trial for an indictable offence by a voluntary bill of indictment, and go directly to the Crown Court, but that would be unusual. |
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Therefore, while Parliament can amend and reject legislation, to make a proposal for legislation, it needs the Commission to draft a bill before anything can become law. |
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Before the new peers were created, however, the Lords who opposed the bill admitted defeat, and abstained from the vote, allowing the passage of the bill. |
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During the committee stage, Isaac Gascoyne put forward a motion objecting to provisions of the bill that reduced the total number of seats in the House of Commons. |
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Earlier the gentleman from California got up on the floor, and he was upset that somebody had said that the underlying bill would eviscerate the Endangered Species Act. |
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He said that the automotive industry must find a substitute for gasoline, on which the elder Edison commented that the electric storage battery has already filled the bill. |
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If you left an old envelope lying about, the leccy bill or a magazine, you'd find it again with a little doodle on. He always had a pen in his hand. |
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Around this time, a bill was passed in the House of Commons regarding the creation of a canal to link Portsmouth to Chichester, but the project was abandoned. |
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When the bill becomes an act, it will provide a big relief to people who now run from pillar to post and are forced to pay bribes to get their work done in government offices. |
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Most parliamentary democracies require an appropriation bill or something similar to be passed by parliament in order for a government to receive money to enact its policies. |
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On a good day he'd rip through several bottles of Gallo White Port and a fifth of bargain scotch. If he stumbled upon a twenty-dollar bill he would drink Irish whiskey. |
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As a friend performed, the pros would take turns sashaying out onto the dance floor to pass her a bill in a tantalizing moment of girl-on-girl action. |
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Because parliamentary rules prohibited the introduction of the same bill twice during the same session, the ministry advised the new king, William IV, to prorogue Parliament. |
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These committees are established in advance of the bill being laid before either the House of Lords or the House of Commons and can take evidence from the public. |
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Some aristocrats complained that, in the future, the government could compel them to pass any bill, simply by threatening to swamp the House of Lords with new peerages. |
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The Tories and the Anglican establishment were hostile to the bill. |
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While all that herky-jerky mathcore in your collection might not fit the bill, put some Portishead on your Pod and the attached OhMiBod will respond rhythmically in kind. |
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In the face of such a threat, the House of Lords narrowly passed the bill. |
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I couldn't believe my luck when I found a fifty dollar bill on the street. |
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In March 1851, Lord John Russell's government was defeated over a bill to equalise the county and borough franchises, mostly because of divisions among his supporters. |
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In 1535, a bill was drawn up calling for the creation of a system of public works to deal with the problem of unemployment, to be funded by a tax on income and capital. |
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The LSE Students' Union later on 6 December issued a formal apology, condemned the actions, as well as promising to foot the bill for the damage repair. |
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Pinter participated both as an actor, as Nicolas in One for the Road, and as a director of a double bill pairing his last play, Celebration, with his first play, The Room. |
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Following the second reading, the bill is sent to a committee. |
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Once the House has considered the bill, the third reading follows. |
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In the House of Lords further amendments to the bill may be moved. |
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Following its passage in one House, the bill is sent to the other House. |
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The only consequence that came of the bill was that Hobbes could never thereafter publish anything in England on subjects relating to human conduct. |
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The bill created the Thames River Police, which was the first preventive police force in the country and was a precedent for Robert Peel's reforms 30 years later. |
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The last stage of a bill involves the granting of the Royal Assent. |
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The last Stuart monarch, Anne, similarly withheld on 11 March 1707, on the advice of her ministers, her assent from a bill for the settling of Militia in Scotland. |
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The bill has created controversy amid civil society organizations. |
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The defeat of the bill caused Gladstone to temporarily lose power. |
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The British Government introduced the necessary bill into the House of Commons in March 1927 and easily secured its passage through both Houses of Parliament. |
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The cute hostie at the check-in for Kamchatka accepted a note the Russian Ambassador in Canberra had given me about excess luggage and gave me a smile rather than a bill. |
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His miscomputation of the amount of tax he owed increased his tax bill. |
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The Governor General, Lord Elgin, had serious misgivings about the bill but nonetheless assented to it despite demands from the Tories that he refuse to do so. |
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Research in Scotland has shown that red, parrot and Scottish crossbills are reproductively isolated, and the diagnostic calls and bill dimensions have not been lost. |
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The House of Commons backed the proposals strongly, but the bill of supremacy met opposition in the House of Lords, particularly from the bishops. |
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A bill of sale might contain a clause stipulating that the slave could not be employed for prostitution, as prostitutes in ancient Rome were often slaves. |
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The bill was defeated amid lobbying by company loyalists and accusations of nepotism in the bill's recommendations for the appointment of councillors. |
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Beastie Boys were about halfway down the bill for day three. |
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In the United Kingdom, a bill is presented for royal assent after it has passed all the required stages in both the House of Commons and the House of Lords. |
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In the second stage, the bill is considered in detail by a bill committee. |
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The bill made no progress in the House of Lords past its first reading. |
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However, like many grassroots Liberals he opposed the bill because it was open to the possibility of subsidising Church of England schools with local ratepayers' money. |
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On 5 February 2008, Conservative MP Andrew Rosindell introduced the 'Union Flag Bill' as a private member's bill under the 10 Minute Rule in the House of Commons. |
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However, the Rump returned to debating its own bill for a new government. |
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The government's proposed National Education curriculum in 2014 attracted polarising reactions across Hong Kong's public and a draft bill was eventually withdrawn. |
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Hall says the King was fatally wounded by an arrow and a bill. |
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This process will be performed at the second reading of a bill or instrument and is currently undergoing a trial period, as an attempt at answering the West Lothian question. |
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A second Home Rule bill was also defeated for similar reasons. |
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A third bill was passed by Parliament in 1914, but not implemented because of the outbreak of the First World War leading to the 1916 Easter Rising. |
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In theory, this allows the bill's provisions to be debated in detail, and for amendments to the original bill to also be introduced, debated, and agreed to. |
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Fox stated the bill was necessary to save the company from bankruptcy. |
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According to Article 91, within fifteen days of passage of a bill by the Cortes Generales, the sovereign shall give his or her assent and publish the new law. |
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Opposition politicians, human rights groups, and nine Western countries criticised the security bill, arguing that it infringed on democratic freedoms. |
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Immediately after the House of Commons passed it, George authorised Lord Temple to inform the House of Lords that he would regard any peer who voted for the bill as his enemy. |
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Once a bill has passed both Houses in an identical form, it receives final, formal examination by the Governor General, who gives it the royal assent. |
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If a regent did assent to a bill of these kinds, it may not be held to be a valid law even if it gained the approval of both houses and royal assent. |
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The citizens of Belfast pay for their water in their rates bill. |
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A parliamentary bill proposed in 1907 would have fixed the seat of the university in Durham for only ten years, allowing the Senate to choose to move to Newcastle after this. |
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The bill became law in March 2012 with a government majority of 88 and following more than 1,000 amendments in the House of Commons and the House of Lords. |
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Walpole agreed to withdraw the bill before Parliament voted on it, but he dismissed the politicians who had dared to oppose it in the first place. |
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In order for a bill to become law it would have to be approved by a majority of both Houses of Parliament before it passed to the monarch for royal assent or veto. |
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