The U.S. has 3 government powers.... President, House of Representatives & Senate. It is to make sure no one has all the power. For instance, if the President wants to sell Alaska to Another Country one of the other powers would have to agree before it could happen. Also, if the House & Senate want to sell Alaska the President could veto. This is just an example. There is no plan to sell Alaska that I am aware of!
The hearings to impeach a president do not start in the Senate. They start at the House of Representatives before proceeding to the Senate.
JFK and LBJ were in the Senate before he was elected and so was Obama.
The president.
Yes, both the House of Representatives and the U.S Senate have to agree to a bill before it is sent to the President.
No, the first U.S. Senators and Representatives took office less than two months before George Washington's first inauguration.
President Lyndon B. Johnson served the longest in the United States Senate before becoming president. He was in the senate for twelve years.
Before his election in 1860 as the first Republican president, Lincoln had been a lawyer, an Illinois state legislator, a member of the United States House of Representatives, and twice an unsuccessful candidate for election to the Senate.
both houses of congress must pass a bill before it can go to the president to be signed into law
Both houses of Congress must pass a bill before it can go to the President to be signed into law.
Both houses of Congress must pass a bill before it can go to the President to be signed into law.
"The House of Representatives have to originate all financial bills, but sometimes the Senate will propose a bill, and even vote on it. They then send it to the House where it will get its official start."However, both the House of Representatives and the Senate have to vote on it and pass it before it can reach the President's desk.
A bill goes to the house of representatives (435 people), is the majority of them say yes then the bill moves onto the Senate (100 people). If the majority of the Senate says yes. (If there is a tie then the Vice President votes on the bill breaking the tie.)Then the bill goes to the President. If the President gets the law and never says anything for ten days the bill automatically becomes a 'pocket veto' and it can try this process of becoming a law again and again. If the President says no then the bill automatically becomes a 'veto' and can try the process of becoming a law as many times as it wants.BUT when a law become a veto it has the chance to 'override' the president (if over half of the House of Representatives say yes then it moves to the Senate- If over half of the senate say yes then the law can skip past the Presidents answer and it automatically becomes a law.)[BILL]-[SENATE]-[PRESIDENT]-[LAW]+(OVERRIDE)