It goes into Probate court and the State decides how it is disbursed.
In this case it dies just as if it had never been passed.
it is passed on to the other house. If that house likes it then it is passed to the president for him/her to sign in or he can let others vote it. You welcome for getting the answer people
If the President signs a bill that has been passed by Congress, it does not die, but becomes law. I have never heard of a President signing a bill before it was passed by Congress, but if he did and it died, I suppose it would mean that he was in danger of being known as a weak President.
They ask the president to sign it and if he dissagrees(or vetos it), they have to get a ceirtian precentage to have it passed. After they get the president to sign itso it can be passed, but if he vetos it than the congrass votes on if the bill should be passed or not. i think they have to get 3/4(voting twards the vote) to pass it.
The President may veto any bill that's presented to him as having passed both houses of Congress. Congress may override that veto, in which case the bill becomes law. The President may not "reverse" a law. However, the President might try to avoid enforcing the law.
they passed the stamp act from maresa
This act was signed by President Lyndon Johnson. The House version was passed while Kennedy was president but Johnson was the president by the time it was passed by the Senate and became law.
I want to know what happens to a bill that is passed by the Senate?
I want to know what happens to a bill that is passed by the Senate?
If a president says no to a bill, it's called a veto. Then after that, he has to send it to Congress which is the Judical Branch. Then Congress looks over the bill, and they can override the bill and it can still be passed.
President Woodrow Wilson