Question

How does a bill become a law?(1 point)
Responses

Supreme Court introduces and approves a bill and then send it to the President.  If the President agree, it becomes law.
Supreme Court introduces and approves a bill and then send it to the President.  If the President agree, it becomes law.

President introduces and approves a bill and then sends it to Congress.  If Congress agree, it becomes law.
President introduces and approves a bill and then sends it to Congress.  If Congress agree, it becomes law.

Congress introduces and approves a bill and then sends it to the President.  If the President agrees, it becomes law.

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:

**Congress introduces and approves a bill and then sends it to the President. If the President agrees, it becomes law.**

Here's a brief overview of the process:

1. A bill is introduced in either the House of Representatives or the Senate.
2. The bill goes through committees for review and amendments.
3. The bill is debated and voted on by the members of the originating chamber.
4. If passed, it moves to the other chamber (House or Senate) for a similar process.
5. If both chambers pass the bill, it is sent to the President.
6. The President can sign the bill into law, veto it, or let it become law without a signature after a certain period. If vetoed, Congress can override the veto with a two-thirds majority in both chambers.
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