Political Science, asked by anjuverma012, 9 months ago

how a law passes ? explain briefly​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

HERE IS YOUR ANSWER MATE:-

The law is put before the chamber to be voted on..... Then both the 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) the bill.

Hope this helps u dear mate!!

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Answered by inamul7
1

Answer:

A bill is proposed by a member of the legislature. It is read in both houses, discussed and both the house and the senate vote on it.If the required number of votes are reached in each house, the bill is said to have passed. It is still a bill at this point.

However, it lacks an essential element which is signature or ratification by the executive. If the governor doesn’t sign it, it may not become law.States vary on how that is handled.

At the Federal level there is a procedure for a bill to become effective if it is on the President’s desk for a specified period of time where he neither signs nor vetoes it.

Once it is passed, signed or adopted, it is a statute. It will have an effective date. Some take effect immediately, others do not. We then say that the law or the satute is “on the books” because in the past, the full official text of a statute was copied into the state statute official register book.

Everyone is presumed to know the law. So as soon as it is effective, it can be

enforced

Explanation:

hope it helps yrr

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