In the U.S. Senate, there is no formal limit on the number of times a senator can speak on a bill during debate. Each senator can participate in discussions as long as they adhere to the rules of the Senate and the specific context of the debate, such as time limits set by unanimous consent or by the Senate majority. However, individual senators may be limited in speaking time by the Senate leadership or through agreements made before the debate.
Usually passed by both houses of CongressYes, many times a compromised bill has worked on by a conference committee of the house and senate members.
The Senate can defeat a bill with 51 votes.
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.
Actually, there are a limited amount of people in the Senate. Anyway, the bill is passed when there are more votes to pass the bill EX: 60 wants bill, 25 doesn't
The Bill Is Referred to the Senate. When a bill reaches the U.S. Senate, it goes through many of the same steps it went through in the U.S. House of Representatives. The bill is discussed in a Senate committee and then reported to the Senate floor to be voted on. Senators vote by voice.
The Bill Is Referred to the Senate. When a bill reaches the U.S. Senate, it goes through many of the same steps it went through in the U.S. House of Representatives. The bill is discussed in a Senate committee and then reported to the Senate floor to be voted on. Senators vote by voice.
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.
Every two years They work for the state while the senate is not in session
In the legislative process, a bill typically needs to be read three times in each chamber (the House and Senate) before it can be sent to the governor for approval. The first reading introduces the bill, the second allows for debate and amendments, and the third is the final vote. After passing both chambers, the bill is then presented to the governor for consideration.
19 times
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)
he did speak many times not only in Gospel but in Torah. ie. the old testament as well