The President, and if the President vetoes it, then Congress can go back and overrule that by passing it again, only exception is that the 2nd time it does not go back to the President.
It goes to the government as part of your taxes down payment.
It goes back to both houses for approval.
It goes to the next house for approval. Example: If senate approves a bill it goes to the house of representatives.
After a bill passes both Houses of Congress it goes to the President for the final signature.
There is a joint conference committee , composed of members of both houses, that try to workout a version of the bill that both houses will accept.
It goes to the president so he can veto or approve it. Veto means reject it or he can let it sit on his desk for 10 days , and that means it's automatically rejected . Answer Response From : Ariel Eva Marie Oliver Thanks For your consideration :)
A bill can originate in either house. If it starts in the senate, it then goes to the house, and vice versa. If a bill passes both houses, it goes to the president's desk, where it awaits the signature of the president.
A bill can go through the House and Senate at the same time. But often, a bill is passed by one house of Congress, then goes to the other for action.After a bill passes both houses, it goes to the President, who either can approve or veto(reject) it.If the President vetoes a bill, it still can become law-if two thirds of the House and the Senate vote to override it.See actual diagram at site below under sources.
After it has been approved by a Senate majority vote.
The bill is introduced in either the House or the Senate by one or more members. It is referred to a committee for review. If the committee votes to pass it forward, it goes to the entire House or Senate where it can be amended (changed) and then voted on. If it passes then it must wait until the other house of Congress (the one that didn't introduce it originally) goes through the same process for a similar bill.When both versions of the bill have been approved by both Houses, they form a conference committee made up of members from both the House of Representatives and the Senate to try and make the bill into a single version that all can accept. If they are successful, the new single bill goes to both Houses to be voted on. If it passes both Houses, it goes to the President.The President can either sign the bill into law, or veto it. If he vetoes a bill it goes back to Congress. If at least 2/3 of both Houses re-pass it, it becomes law without the President's signature.
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.
If both houses of Congress pass the bill, it is sent to the President. If the president signs it, is becomes the law. If the President does not sign it, or actively vetoes it, it goes back to Congress. If it is passed by both houses of Congress again, it automatically becomes law, although override of a President's veto is realtively uncommon.