In the US "Bicameral" model, there are only two houses of congress: the Senate and the House of Representatives.
It's got to be one of those, but I can't tell you which one is the "other". I assume the question originated somewhere with enough context for it to make sense.
The Rules Committee decides when a bill is taken from the calendar and discussed on the House floor.
The Rules Committee decides when a bill is taken from the calendar and discussed on the House floor.
The Rules Committee decides when a bill is taken from the calendar and discussed on the House floor.
The Rules Committee decides when a bill is taken from the calendar and discussed on the House floor.
The Rules Committee decides when a bill is taken from the calendar and discussed on the House floor.
It goes to the other house for approval :)
congress is about to adjourn
The White House can only suggest that the Congress consider a bill to become a law. However, only a member of Congress is allowed to propose the bill directly to Congress.
After a bill is introduced in either the House or the Senate, the bill is assigned a number.
The individual country's legislatures. In the United States, the US Congress (House and Senate) pass a bill. The President of the US signs it into law.
The President can't sponsor a bill in Congress.
The committee passes the bill to another committee in the other house of Congress.