Answer:
1. You write your state or federal senator about your idea.
2. Your congressman sponsors a bill.
3. The bill is sent to a Committee for its study.
4. If committee approves of the relevance and usefulness of the bill it is put on a schedule that will define the date when it will be debated, amended if necessary and/or voted.
5. The bill goes to the House for action.
6. If the bill is approved by the vote (simple majority) it is sent to the senate.
7. The bill goes through a similar process in the Senate and may be sent back to the House of Representatives if it has been changed. Then it is voted again by both chambers and sent to the president who will either veto it or sign it into law within ten days.
Both the Senate and the House have to agree on the final version of the bill and it is not uncommon for a bill to go back and forth between both chambers several times
Explanation:
- michelcecilia
Answer:
would have to raise
The definition of past tense:
a tense expressing an action that has happened or a state that previously existed.
So, we eliminate the ones in past tense
<em>did have to raise its dues</em>
Definition of present tense:
The present tense is used for actions which are happening now.
So, we eliminate ones using present tense
<em>raises</em>
Final note:
If one word or phrase in a sentence/paragraph is past or present tense, the whole thing will need to be past or present tense.
Hope that helped!!
- Kaavya
PS. plzzz give me brainliest!
In Act 3, Scene 5, Hecate appears before the Witches and demands to know why she has been excluded from their meetings with Macbeth.
C.the intended use of a product