In the United States Congress, the Senate and the House of Representatives are two separate chambers that operate concurrently. There is no strict order in which legislation must pass through them; both chambers can introduce, debate, and vote on bills independently. However, most legislation must be approved by both chambers before becoming law. In practice, the Senate often considers some issues before the House, but this can vary based on the specific legislative agenda.
Yes, both the House of Representatives and the U.S Senate have to agree to a bill before it is sent to the President.
The Senate along with the House of Representatives is responsible for creating new laws. Senators must vote on bills before they become laws.
They are elected by the people before the president.
The house committee must pass it to the Senate committee
JFK and LBJ were in the Senate before he was elected and so was Obama.
The senate is also called the upper house.
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He served in both the House and Senate.
The senate is the upper house.
Both the house and the senate have commitees. The bills are separated into categories and sent to different commitees. If they are passed within the committee then it is brought before the senate.
The Senate and the House of Representatives
Who are the Senate house of the Philippines?