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A bill is introduced by a member from the senate, then it is passed on to its proper committee by the house speaker, then the committee considers the bill and the subcommittee investigates the bill. Next, the committee reports the bill to members of the senate, it is read through a first time, amended then read through a second time. Next, it is read a third time, the members debate it then vote on it. If passed, the bill moves to the house of representatives where this whole process of going through committee, reading it, and voting on it is repeated. If it is passed it is sent to the president where he can either veto it or pass it and make it a law. If he chooses to veto it, congress may choose to override the veto and the bill becomes a law. See below link:

-This is close but not quite right and there isn't a link.

The bill can be introduced by a Senator or a Member of the House of Representatives. However, Members of the House can only introduce bills in the House and Senators only in the Senate. The Speaker of the House directs House bills, but the Senate Majority Leader directs Senate bills. And bills don't always go through Committees - there are exceptions to this, but it is rare.

And you are right that once it's voted on in one body, it is then sent to the other, but it doesn't matter who votes first. Except any spending bill or formal impeachements. Those bills can only originate in the House. But, the Senate must agree to the spending bill and the Senate is in charge of conducting impeachment hearings.

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14y ago

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Related Questions

What house of congress does a bill pass through?

It must go through both the Senate and the House of Representatives.


What action can Congress take to check the power of a presidential veto of a bill?

When Congress passes a bill and the president then uses his power of veto the bill can go through Congress again. If both houses then vote 2/3 or more the second time for the bill then it passes and becomes law.


What action can congress take to check the powers of a presidential veto of a bill?

When Congress passes a bill and the president then uses his power of veto the bill can go through Congress again. If both houses then vote 2/3 or more the second time for the bill then it passes and becomes law.


How is congress related to law making?

Congress is made of the house of Representatives and the Senate. A bill must be passed through congress by a 2/3 majority. Than it may go to the president.


Bill goes through many steps before it becomes a law because?

A bill needs to go through four steps so that congress and the Supreme Court can decide


If a bill passes both houses of congress does it become a law?

no. the president is the third part it has to go through. but if he vetoed it they can override him.


Where do bill go if both houses of congress approve the bill?

The president


President vetoes a bill and congress wants to become a law?

If the president vetoes a bill, then Congress can override that vetoe, but the bill must go back to Congress to be approved with a majority vote.


What is it called when you change a law?

goes through a process called Amendments and changes the law first it has to go to congress


What is the role of the president in regard to laws passed by congress?

either to sign in and make it become a law or to veto the bill then the bill will go back to congress and if two thirds of congress vote on the bill the bill becomes a law


Who sends the bills to congress?

Bills have to go through both chambers of the US Congress before they can be signed into law by the President. The bill can originate from either chamber, committees in the chambers, and from the President.


What can a member of congress do?

Anyone can write, draft a bill. But only a member of congress can sponsor the bill. The bill must be sponsored by a member before it can go to the floor for debate