The correct explanation for the process of a bill becoming a law is the following sequence:
Step 1: Bill Introduced
A bill is introduced by either body of Congress (House or Senate).
Step 2: Committee Review
The bill is assigned to a committee. Committee members conduct research and discuss any changes to the bill they feel are necessary.
Step 3: Chamber (House or Senate) Review
The bill goes to chamber review, where House or Senate members debate or make changes to the text before voting.
Step 4: Other Chamber Review
After the bill passes the House or Senate, it then goes to the other body to go through the same committee process of research, debate, and voting.
Step 5: House and Senate Vote
Both the House and the Senate vote on the same exact bill, and if it passes, they present it to the president.
Step 6: Presidential Review
The president then considers the bill and will either approve it and sign it into law, veto it, or take no action.
This sequence correctly outlines the legislative process. The steps should reflect that a bill is reviewed in committee before going to the full chamber for a vote, and that both the House and Senate must agree on the same version of the bill before it proceeds to the president.