It goes to a conference committee composed of both Representatives and Senators. They attempt to work out a compromise bill which then gets sent back to both House and Senate for their consideration.
Many times, the House and Senate pass slightly different versions of a bill. If this happens both the House and the Senate appoint conferees to work out a compromise. This committee is called a conference committee.
the President
the constitution
the President
When the bill passes on the terms it wins this is the right awnser for a guided reading in a social studies class
When the bill passes on the terms it wins this is the right awnser for a guided reading in a social studies class
When each house of congress passes a different version of a bill and those differences must be resolved.
They are formed to settle differences between House and Senate versions of the same bill.
When each house of congress passes a different version of a bill and those differences must be resolved.
I belive that the 2 versions end up in a confrence commitie. A confrence commitie is a joint commitie (house and senate members) and then the form 1 version by mixing the 2. Once done the 1 version will be debated upon and voted on to see if it passes. If passed it becomes a law.
The Conference Committee is created to iron out the differences between the House and Senate versions of a bill. There are no formal rules governing conference committees procedures because they are intended to be flexible in negotiating sessions.
A conference committee
Conference Committees: Congressional committees formed when the Senate and the House pass a particular bill in different forms. Party leadership appoints members from each house to iron out the differences and bring back a single bill.
when each house of congress passes a different version of a bill and those difference must be resolved (novatnet/gradpoint) I hated going through all that time trying to finish the freaking modules, you're welcome brahhh
A bill can be proposed in either house of Congress (the Senate or the House of Representatives). It is voted on in the house in which it is proposed; if it passes, it is sent to the other chamber of Congress, where it can be edited, amended, and voted on. If it is passed in the second house of Congress, then it is sent back to the first house to approve any changes that are made. If there are significant differences, sometimes a committee is formed between the two houses to iron these out. Once the bill has been approved in identical forms in both houses of Congress, it is sent to the President. If he signs it, it becomes law; if he vetoes it, it is sent back to the house of Congress where it originated. If it passes by a 2/3 vote in each house, then it becomes law without the president's signature.