A bill needs to go through four steps so that congress and the Supreme Court can decide
The president signs a bill after the legisilative branch approves it. The president (executive branch) enforces or carries out a law ( or bill. )
1.introduction 2. committee action 3. floor action 4. enactment into law
When the president signs the bill, it becomes law. If the president refuses, the bill is vetoed, but if a two thirds vote by Congress, it can still become law.
It becomes law with his signature.
A bill needs to go through four steps so that congress and the Supreme Court can decide
Huy pizda skovoroda menya trahal Djigurda
ask your mom
first a bill is only an idea, then it becomes a bill if the people like it and then it becomes a law
The president signs a bill after the legisilative branch approves it. The president (executive branch) enforces or carries out a law ( or bill. )
A bill that becomes a law is called an act.
The bill of rights provide the list of basic rights and freedoms. While the constitution is the foundation of how government works.
There is five steps to making a bill becoming a law in GA. Citizen suggest an ideal, member of the house tells about the bill, the senate and house vote to approve the bill, the government signs the bill and then it becomes law.
1.introduction 2. committee action 3. floor action 4. enactment into law
It depends ... At a minimum, 1. A bill is introduced. 2. It is debated, amended and passed. 3. The bill is sent to the other Congressional house. 4. Repeat steps 1 - 3. Assuming the two bills are identical, then 5. The bill is sent to the President for signing. Once signed, the bill becomes a law. In reality, there are many more steps - committee meetings, drafting and re-drafting the bill, cross-committee revisions (in the event that a bill must pass through multiple committees), floor debates and amendments, joint committees to iron out differences between House and Senate versions of the same bill, possible revision to address Presidential veto/objections ... Getting a bill into law is a little like hot dogs - people generally like the finished product, but viewing the manufacturing can be ugly!
When the president signs the bill, it becomes law. If the president refuses, the bill is vetoed, but if a two thirds vote by Congress, it can still become law.
I'm pretty sure that it becomes a law