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Laws for the states are made in the.......
Answers
Answer:
A bill can be introduced in either chamber of Congress by a senator or representative who sponsors it.
Once a bill is introduced, it is assigned to a committee whose members will research, discuss, and make changes to the bill.
The bill is then put before that chamber to be voted on.
If the bill passes one body of Congress, it goes to the other body to go through a similar process of research, discussion, changes, and voting.
Once both bodies vote to accept a bill, they must work out any differences between the two versions. Then both chambers vote on the same exact bill and, if it passes, they present it to the president.
The president then considers the bill. The president can approve the bill and sign it into law or not approve (veto) a bill.
If the president chooses to veto a bill, in most cases Congress can vote to override that veto and the bill becomes a law. But, if the president pocket vetoes a bill after Congress has adjourned, the veto cannot be overridden.
Differences Between the House and Senate Procedures
The Senate and the House have some procedural differences between them. Learn more about each body’s process:
How a bill becomes law when it originates in the House of Representatives
Active legislation in the House
How a bill becomes law when it originates in the Senate
Active legislation in the Senate
Federal and State Laws, Regulations, and Related Court Decisions
Federal laws apply to people living in the United States and its territories.
Congress creates and passes bills. The president then may sign those bills into law. Federal courts may review the laws to see if they agree with the Constitution. If a court finds a law is unconstitutional, it can strike it down.
Find Federal Laws
The United States Code contains general and permanent federal laws. It does not include regulations, decisions, or laws issued by:
Federal agencies
Federal courts
Treaties
State and local governments
New public and private laws appear in each edition of the United States Statutes at Large. There is a new edition for each session of Congress.
Find bills and resolutions introduced by the current and earlier sessions of Congress. This includes new laws that have not yet been assigned a public law number.
Find laws and joint resolutions that have been assigned public law numbers.
Visit the Law Library of Congress to research U.S. code, statutes, and public laws.
To find older laws, visit a law library or a Federal Depository Library.
Federal Regulations
Regulations are issued by federal agencies, boards, and commissions. They explain how agencies plan to carry out laws. Regulations are published yearly in the Code of Federal Regulations.
The Rulemaking Process
Federal regulations are created through a process known as rulemaking (PDF, Download Adobe Reader). If an agency wants to make, change, or delete a rule, it will:
Publish the proposal in the Federal Register
Seek public comment
Consider the public's comments and change the rule if necessary. The agency then publishes the final version in the Federal Register along with:
A description of the comments received
The agency’s response to those comments
The date the rule goes into effect
Explanation:
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Answer:
Everyone must follow the Federal laws because we live in one nation called the United States.
Federal laws are made by Congress on all kinds of matters, such as speed limits on highways. These laws make sure that all people are kept safe. The United States Congress is the lawmaking body of the Federal Government. Congress has two houses: the House of Representatives and the Senate.
Each state also passes its own laws, which you must follow when you are in that state. If you live in Michigan, for example, you would follow the laws of that state as well as the Federal laws.