it depends realy. if the president vetoes the law and two thirds of each part of the legislative branch approve it, then it will become a law. if the president approves it and less than two thirds of each part of the legislative branch do not approve it, it will become a law
It makes no difference how many readings a bill gets, it does not automatically become law after a certain number of readings.It must be PASSED by Congress and sent to the President. It does NOT BECOME LAW until the President signs it.
There are many ways for people to become counselors. People can become counselors by receiving an education and studying a subject such as psychology. They must also practice their people skills.
For the bill to become law, the President must sign the bill, or Congress must override his or her veto. So, if the President forgot about the bill, it would not become law.
A BILL does not automatically become a LAW. It must be passed and sent to the President. Only when the President signs the bill does it become law.See below link:
the bill goes back to the senate
First the bill must make it out of committee. The bill must be voted on and passed by both the House of Representatives and the Senate. Then if the bill is signed by the President it will become law.
Yes
I think you are referring to how a bill becomes a law. A bill must pass both houses of congress and then the president must sign it.
so that a crappy, pointless bill will not become a crappy, pointless law. ;)
a vote by the house,a vote by the senate ,and signing by the executive
Any member of either house of congress can present a bill to congress. A bill is a proposed law. Many congressmen present bills to please his constituents when he knows there is no possibility the bill will be passed. Many times the House will pass one version of a Bill that it does not like and the Senate will pass another version of the same Bill that it does not like. The two will never become reconciled because in reality, neither house really wants them but must pass them for political reasons. For a bill to become law, both houses must pass the same bill and at the Federal Level, the President must sign it (or at the state level, in most states, the governor must sign it). So a bill is a law before it becomes a law.
president