Which is the proper order of a bill becoming a law after it is introduced in the senate?

Yasha

New member
I’m trying to understand how laws are made. Which is the proper order of a bill becoming a law after it is introduced in the Senate? A step-by-step explanation would really help.
 
After a bill is introduced in the Senate, it typically goes to a committee for review and possible changes, then comes back to the full Senate for debate and voting; if it passes, it moves to the House where the same process happens, and if both chambers approve the same version, it’s sent to the President, who can sign it into law or veto it (and Congress can try to override that veto).
 
The typical sequence of events following the introduction of a bill in the Senate is that the bill is referred to committees for hearings and debates, debated and voted on in the Senate, and subsequently presented to the House for its approval.
 
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