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 House of Representatives, the Senate and the President.
Both the House and the Senate must pass a bill before it goes to the President. If both houses of Congress pass a similar bill yet cannot agree on the particulars the bill will go to a joint reconciliation committee for final changes which will then become law.
the senate has to agree on the bill before it goes on
conference committee
Mary, Sheila, Nancy and I attended the meeting.The House and the Senate failed to agree on a bill.
the senate has to agree on the bill before it goes on.
It's voted on by the senate. Then, if it passes, it goes back to the house to be voted on again.answer #2if the second house make changes to the bill, the bill goes to a conference committee where a small number of House and Senate members hash out the differences between the two houses. Often the conference committee meetings are not public as they should be. The conference committee is allowed to virtually rewrite the bill if that is what it takes to get a compromise. The agreement between the two houses in conference is then voted on by both Houses, if they both agree the bill goes to the President for his signature.
A Bill is either first proposed in the Senate or the House of Representatives then it requires a majority vote from both houses and then would go to the President's desk for either a veto which sends the bill back to both houses or the President signs the bill into law.
A bill that originated in the Senate goes to the House of Representatives only if the Senate passes it.
they fight till they get it figured out. or the fight in a war.
The members of the House and the Senate.
A bill can originate in the Senate, and a bill can also originate in the House of Representatives. Wherever it starts, the other house gets a shot at debating the bill as well.