You need a majority in the house and there needs to be a quorum
3/3
13 out of 13 votes to change a law.
Many large law firms accept payment by credit card but there is no rule as such. You would need to call law firms in your area to make that determination.
You would need nine states to accept the change before it would be law.
If all members vote, 51 votes are needed to pass a bill. Otherwise it passes if more than half of the votes are "Ayes".
Suffragettes demonstrated to try to get votes for women. Sometimes they broke the law in their demonstrations. They were hoping to get new laws made that allowed votes for women. So they were both law breakers and law makers.
In a democracy, a simple majority is enough to pass a law.
Until law school, anything. Law schools accept students with bachelor's degrees nearly any field. In law school, you'll study law.
If Congress has enough votes, they do not need the President's approval.
a legislator
Absolutely not. Harvard will accept students from many different undergraduate schools into their Law School.
Neither.