Find Laws Find Lawyers Free Legal Forms USA State Laws
Laws-info.com » Bills Search » H.R.4427 — 93rd Congress (1973-1974) - Bills
Search Bills

Browse Bills

93rd (26222)
94th (23756)
95th (21548)
96th (14332)
97th (20134)
98th (19990)
99th (15984)
100th (15557)
101st (15547)
102nd (16113)
103rd (13166)
104th (11290)
105th (11312)
106th (13919)
107th (16380)
108th (15530)
109th (19491)
110th (7009)
111th (19293)
112th (15911)
113th (9767)
H.R.4427 — 93rd Congress (1973-1974) [93rd]
Sponsor:
Rep. Wilson, Charles H. [D-CA-31] (Introduced 02/20/1973)

Summary:
Summary: H.R.4427 — 93rd Congress (1973-1974)

There is one summary for this bill. Bill summaries are authored by CRS.

Shown Here:
Introduced in House (02/20/1973)

Authorizes the Bureau of the Census to establish a mail canvass procedure for evaluating voter participation in Federal elections.

Requires that the Bureau of the Census shall submit, to designated congressional committees, biennial interim progress and comparison reports on (1) the publicity, training, cost, staffing, and electoral procedures scheduled for implementation in each congressional district by State; (2) a detailed report on the votes cast for each candidate by party designation (with a technical commentary on the conduct of the elections in each congressional district for the last four Federal elections); and (3) recommendations as considered necessary for improvements in carrying out future Federal elections. (Adds 13 U.S.C. 201-204)


Major Actions:
Summary: H.R.4427 — 93rd Congress (1973-1974)

There is one summary for this bill. Bill summaries are authored by CRS.

Shown Here:
Introduced in House (02/20/1973)

Authorizes the Bureau of the Census to establish a mail canvass procedure for evaluating voter participation in Federal elections.

Requires that the Bureau of the Census shall submit, to designated congressional committees, biennial interim progress and comparison reports on (1) the publicity, training, cost, staffing, and electoral procedures scheduled for implementation in each congressional district by State; (2) a detailed report on the votes cast for each candidate by party designation (with a technical commentary on the conduct of the elections in each congressional district for the last four Federal elections); and (3) recommendations as considered necessary for improvements in carrying out future Federal elections. (Adds 13 U.S.C. 201-204)


Amendments:
Summary: H.R.4427 — 93rd Congress (1973-1974)

There is one summary for this bill. Bill summaries are authored by CRS.

Shown Here:
Introduced in House (02/20/1973)

Authorizes the Bureau of the Census to establish a mail canvass procedure for evaluating voter participation in Federal elections.

Requires that the Bureau of the Census shall submit, to designated congressional committees, biennial interim progress and comparison reports on (1) the publicity, training, cost, staffing, and electoral procedures scheduled for implementation in each congressional district by State; (2) a detailed report on the votes cast for each candidate by party designation (with a technical commentary on the conduct of the elections in each congressional district for the last four Federal elections); and (3) recommendations as considered necessary for improvements in carrying out future Federal elections. (Adds 13 U.S.C. 201-204)


Cosponsors:
Summary: H.R.4427 — 93rd Congress (1973-1974)

There is one summary for this bill. Bill summaries are authored by CRS.

Shown Here:
Introduced in House (02/20/1973)

Authorizes the Bureau of the Census to establish a mail canvass procedure for evaluating voter participation in Federal elections.

Requires that the Bureau of the Census shall submit, to designated congressional committees, biennial interim progress and comparison reports on (1) the publicity, training, cost, staffing, and electoral procedures scheduled for implementation in each congressional district by State; (2) a detailed report on the votes cast for each candidate by party designation (with a technical commentary on the conduct of the elections in each congressional district for the last four Federal elections); and (3) recommendations as considered necessary for improvements in carrying out future Federal elections. (Adds 13 U.S.C. 201-204)


Comments

Tips