I don't know this question and its do tomorrow at 12:00. The second step to amending the Constitution is that an amendment must be approved by hear are the answers half of state legislatures: three-fourths of state legislatures: the president: the supreme Court.

Respuesta :

Answer:Step 1. Passage by Congress. Proposed amendment language must be approved by a two-thirds vote of both houses.

Step 2. Notification of the states. The national archivist sends notification and materials to the governor of each state.

Step 3. Ratification by three-fourths of the states. Ratification of the amendment language adopted by Congress is an up-or-down vote in each legislative chamber. A state legislature cannot change the language. If it does, its ratification is invalid. A governor’s signature on the ratification bill or resolution is not necessary.

Step 4. Tracking state actions. Proposed amendments must be ratified by three-fourths of the states in order to take effect. Congress may set a time limit for state action. The official count is kept by Office of the Federal Register at the National Archives. Legislatures must return specific materials to show proof of ratification.

Step 5. Announcement. When the requisite number of states ratify a proposed amendment, the archivist of the United States proclaims it as a new amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Actual certification is published immediately in the Federal Register and eventually in the United States Statutes-at-Large.

State legislatures often call upon Congress to propose constitutional amendments. While these calls may bring some political pressure to bear, Congress is under no constitutional obligation to respond. The U.S. Constitution does not contain a provision requiring Congress to submit a proposed amendment upon request by some requisite number of states.

(I'm not sure if this is right I searched it up)

Explanation:

Answer:

The answer is B. three-fourths of state legislatures

Explanation:    The second step is that 3/4 of state legislatures must vote "yes" to amend the constitution because if they didn't need state legislatures, they could make amendments that the people of the states wouldn't like.

Right on edge2020

Hey and don't forget to hit that THANKS button below

PS pls mark brainliest if possible