No- the President can not veto an proposed amendment. It is not a law .
Article 5 of the constitution makes this clear, but in case it was not clear enough the Supreme Court in Hollingsworth v Virginia (3 USC 378 [1798]) ruled the President does even have to be informed of amendments if they are passed.
No- resolutions are not sent to the President for approval. They are not proposed legislation but merely a statement by the house that passes it.
No
The US Congress can pass a law despite a President's veto by vote of a 2/3 majority in each House of the Congress.
The President can veto it,but the Congress can surpass the President's veto with a 2/3 vote.
Under the US Constitution, bills passed by the US Congress and sent to the US president for signing the bill into law can be vetoed by the president. It takes a two thirds majority in the Congress to over ride a presidential veto.
If a US president vetoes a bill sent to him by the US Congress, the president may choose to veto the bill. In such a case, the bill is sent back to the congress. If the Congress can come up with a two thirds majority, then the bill must pass as law.
A pocket veto will be possible for the president only if Congress adjourns before the president has ten days to sign or veto the bill. If Congress adjourns during this period, the bill does not become law and is effectively vetoed.
If the President vetoes a bill and refuses to sign it into law, the Congress can override his veto with a 2/3 majority vote in each house of Congress.
a president simply rejects it officially or the congress overrules it by a majority vote
In the US, the president has the power to veto any laws passed by congress. However, they can over ride the veto with enough votes.
per the US Constitution, the President can recommend laws to be acted upon by the Congress, and he has the power to veto legislation made by the Congress that he disagrees with
The President of the US has the duty to prevent laws passed by Congress from going into effect by using his powers to veto.
President or Supreme Court can find it unconstitutional.
who can veto a bill The executive branch is who veto's bills. Executive branch is the president. He is the only one who can Veto a bill if everyone else says Yes to it. <3 Answer to that answer up there ^ __________________________ The president can veto a bill, but as seen while Chester Arthur was president, particularly the River and Harbor Act, Congress overrode the veto and passed legislation the next day. The president can veto a bill, but to some extent is his veto accounted for.