The bill after every Senate and Delegate has approved or the votes win, the bill then must go to the executive branch.
I assume the House of Representatives has approved the bill then sent it to the Senate for its vote. If the Senate then passes the bill by 69 votes or even 100 votes, the President can veto it. The Constitution does not prohibit a veto if a certain percentage of Congressmen approve it on the first try. After the bill is vetoed it goes back to the House where it originated and if that House votes by 2/3 majority to pass it, it goes to the other House for its approval. If 2/3 of that House also approves it, the bill becomes law without the President's approval. At that point in the process the President does not even have the right to veto the bill.
They ask the president to sign it and if he dissagrees(or vetos it), they have to get a ceirtian precentage to have it passed. After they get the president to sign itso it can be passed, but if he vetos it than the congrass votes on if the bill should be passed or not. i think they have to get 3/4(voting twards the vote) to pass it.
With the initiative, voters could petition state legislatures to consider a bill.
For a bill to become law it must be passed by both houses of Congress, so when the Senate passes a bill, the same bill must also go to the House of Representatives, or if the House has passed a similar bill, the two bills must be reconciled by a joint committee to produce a single bill that both houses can pass. Then when both houses have passed the same bill, the bill goes to the President for his signature. The President may or may not sign the bill, and if he doesn't, Congress can over-ride the veto if they have enough votes. Otherwise the bill dies.
ajudication
lobby
That is called lobbying.
Lobby or Lobbying
That is called lobbying.
This is to Lobby or Lobbying
Lobbying is the act of trying to influence the votes of legislatures. In 2013, there were 12,281 registered lobbyists in the U. S.
lobby
That is called lobbying.
There are many who try to do so, but a person who does it full time is known as a "lobbyist."
That is called lobbying.
Any citizen of the United States has the power and right to influence the votes of the United States legislature, but this is usually only practiced by active citizens, or professional petitioners known as lobbyists.