congressional record
Congressional record
A person who is not a member of Congress but goes there to speak about and to advance a particular cause is called a lobbyist.
goes through a process called Amendments and changes the law first it has to go to congress
Congress publishes "The Congressional Record" which recoeds word-for-word everything that goes on in congress each day.
If the President of the United States refuses to sign a bill into law, he vetos it and returns it to the Congress. The Congress can, by 2/3 vote of both the House of Representatives AND the Senate, override the President's veto, and the law goes into effect without the President's approval.
No, no one goes to mikvah on a daily basis.
A bill goes through a process. It starts in one of the houses in congress, goes to committee, gets voted on by the committee, then is either changed, tabled, or stays the same, after it leaves committee the body votes on it. Then, it goes to the other body of congress and goes through the same process. If it passes both houses it goes to the president and he either signs it or vetoes it.
He goes to work for the special interest outfit that bought his job in congress.
If both houses of congress pass it, it goes to the president. If and when he signs it, it becomes law.
goes to congress, then it is voted on.
No. If the bill is vetoed by the President the bill goes back the congress where in order for it to get passed two thirds of congress has to vote for it.
butterfly