No. State representatives serve in their State Legislature.
Every state has elected officials consisting of the governor of the state and state representatives. If we move further down to the local level , there are district representatives and mayors if the area is incorporated. Note, the state senators and state representatives are technically are dichotomous positions in that they serve both a state interest and at the federal level.
Many political representatives are elected at the state level, even if they serve on a national level. This includes senators and members of the House of Representatives, governors and representatives to the state congress.
state and federal representatives serve 2 years per term
It is the U.S. Congress. Congress has 2 houses: Senate and House of Representatives . Senate has 100 members ( 2 members per state ). House of Representatives has 435 members
Representatives serve a district, as determined by their state legislature, based on census data. To serve a whole state, that's a Senator.
Once a bill is passed by the Senate and House of Representatives at the state level, it becomes law when the governor signs it. At the federal level, after being passed by the federal House and Senate, it becomes law when the president signs it.
No, he is your president. Depending on where you live, your state has a certain number of state and federal representatives. The state representatives meet at your state's legislature: for example, in Massachusetts, the state representatives do their work at the State House in Boston. But the federal representatives meet in congress, in the House of Representatives in Washington DC.
31 Senators and 150 Representatives serve in the Texas legislature.
Federal
Representatives are elected by the people in a state.
They serve two year terms each.
There are two Senators from each state, and enough representatives to represent the population of the state.