In the United States, laws are primarily written by Congress, which consists of two chambers: the House of Representatives and the Senate. Members of Congress propose bills, which are then debated, amended, and voted on. If a bill passes both chambers, it is sent to the President for approval or veto. Additionally, state legislatures and local governments can create their own laws within their jurisdictions.
No. Congress (the Senate and House of Representatives) writes laws.
President Obama heads the executive Branch and he writes the laws.
No answer
Three. The Legislative, the Executive, and the Judicial. The Legislative writes the laws, the Executive approves them, and the Judicial enforces them.
A person who writes laws is called a legislator or a lawmaker.
vengeance
Legislative
Citizens, the congress, and the president. Basically the citizens sometimes send the idea in, the congress and president approve it.
In the US Congress writes the law.It is sent to the US President for approval, who then signs the bill or says that it is not right to be a law. Then they vote and the vote has to be two thirds, that is how they make a law.
i dont know but i think it is the court
Legislative Branch.
A king writes laws, signs documents and cares for a country.