Maryland’s Legislative Landscape

  • Who & Where
    • The General Assembly (MGA) is a citizen legislature of 188 members (141 delegates and 47 senators) who meet 90 days each year (Jan–Apr) (Legislative Session) to debate roughly 2,500 bills, enacting about 700 laws per session.

 

    • Forty-seven legislative districts send one senator and three delegates each, giving every voter four voices in Annapolis.

 

    • Members serve four-year terms; the next statewide election is November 2026.

 

 

 

  • What the MGA Does
    • Enacts public general and local laws, levies taxes, appropriates funds, and oversees state agencies, shaping virtually every public-policy arena
       

 

Power Structure at a Glance

House

Size

Presiding Officer

Key Powers

Senate

47

President

Sets agenda, assigns bills & committees, appoints leaders

House

141

Speaker

Identical authority within the chamber

 

Committees: Where Bills Live or Die

Each legislator sits on one standing committee; these panels hold public hearings and cast the first formal vote on every bill (Committee Hearings).
Key standing committees include Budget & Taxation, Finance, Judicial Proceedings, Education Energy & Environment, Appropriations, Environment & Transportation, Health & Government Operations, Judiciary, Ways & Means.

Beyond standing committees, the MGA uses:

  • Select (Local) Committees for county-specific bills (local courtesy).
  • Statutory, Special & Conference Committees for oversight, research, or reconciling bill differences.

 

The 90-Day Countdown 

Month

Milestones (Check the schedule)

January

Session convenes; prior-year veto overrides; bill drafting & pre-filing begin.

February

Committee hearings ramp up; first floor votes start.

March

Crossover Day: bills must pass origin chamber to stay alive.

April

Frantic floor action ends with Sine Die adjournment at midnight Day 90.

During the interim (May–Dec.) lawmakers study issues, draft bills, and meet with constituents.

 

How a Bill Becomes a Law: Seven High-Impact Moments

  1. Idea & Sponsorship – A constituent, advocacy group, or legislator conceives an idea; a member requests drafting by the Department of Legislative Services.
  2. First Reading – Bill number announced; assigned to a standing (and sometimes select) committee.
  3. Committee Hearing – Public testimony, fiscal note review, possible amendments; committee reports bill out favorable/unfavorable.
  4. Second Reading – Chamber floor debate; further amendments allowed; amended bill printed for third reading.
  5. Third Reading – Final vote in first chamber; no new amendments permitted thereafter.
  6. Second Chamber – Bill repeats steps 2-5; if amended, origin chamber must concur, reject, or request a conference committee.
  7. Governor’s Desk & Possible Veto – Governor signs or vetoes; MGA may override with a 3/5 vote in each house.

Result: “Chaptered” law enters the Maryland Code.

How do you get a bill sponsored? Call your local legislator, and they will point you in the right direction.

 

Roles of Senators vs. Delegates

Role

Senators

Delegates

Constituency

Entire district

1/3 of district (or sub-district)

Workload

Fewer committees, deeper subject focus; traditionally slower, deliberate chamber

Larger, faster-moving body; initiates revenue bills; often more progressive

Unique Powers

Confirm gubernatorial appointments (Exec Nominations)

Originate appropriation & tax bills

Knowing the calendar lets you pitch early, before committees finalize bill positions.

 

Track Maryland Legislation:

  •    View bills, hearing dates, and testimonies.

 

Supplemental Info from University of Maryland Center for Democracy and Civil Engagement