30 days
Any bill not returned by the Governor within 60 calendar days after it is presented to him shall become law. If recess or adjournment of the General Assembly prevents the return of a bill, the bill and the Governor's objections must be filed with the Secretary of State within such 60 calendar days. The Secretary of State must return the bill and objections to the originating chamber promptly upon the next meeting of the same General Assembly at which the bill can be considered.
Any bill not returned by the Governor within 60 calendar days after it is presented to him shall become law. If recess or adjournment of the General Assembly prevents the return of a bill, the bill and the Governor's objections must be filed with the Secretary of State within such 60 calendar days. The Secretary of State must return the bill and objections to the originating chamber promptly upon the next meeting of the same General Assembly at which the bill can be considered.
it depends
http://www.house.mo.gov/content.aspx?info=/info/howbill.htm SIGNING BY THE GOVERNOR Bills Truly Agreed To and Finally Passed are signed in open session by the Speaker of the House and the President Pro Tem of the Senate. At the time of signing, any members may file written objections which are sent with the bill to the Governor. The Governor has fifteen days to act on a bill if it is sent to him during the legislative session; and forty-five days if the legislature has adjourned or has recessed for a thirty day period. The Governor has four options:1. Sign the bill, making it become part of Missouri law. 2. Veto the bill. In this case, the bill is returned to the General Assembly where a two-thirds vote of both houses is required to override the veto. 3. Not sign the bill. Should the Governor take no action within the prescribed time, the bill goes to the Secretary of State, who then enrolls the bill as an authentic act. It then becomes law. 4. Veto line-items in an appropriation bill. On appropriation bills only, the Governor may choose to veto selected items within the bill. The General Assembly may override this veto by a two-thirds majority of both houses.
Bill Haslam was elected Governor of Tennessee in 2010 and was sworn in on January 15, 2011. In 2014 Haslam was reelected to a second four year term.
Well, he isn't any more, though he used to be on long-since discontinued $10,000 bill. Chase was the United States Senator from Ohio, governor of Ohio, Secretary of the Treasury under Abraham Lincoln, and eventually Supreme Court justice.
Bill Haslam is the 49th Governor of Tennessee. He was elected Governor in 2010 and assumed office January 15, 2011. He served as Mayor of Knoxville December 20, 2003 - January 10, 2011.
in the year of 2014
Since 2003 and will depart that position in January 2009 to assume the position as the Secretary of Homeland Security if approved by the Senate.
The state of Virginia is currently the only state where the Governor cannot serve more than one term at a time. He/she may serve as many non-consectutive terms as they want but no consectutive terms. The legnth of a Virginia Governor's term is 4 years.
Bill Haslam is the 49th and current Governor of Tennessee. He was elected Governor in 2010 and was re-elected Governor in 2014. The Governor of Tennessee is elected every four years and is limited to two consecutive terms. Bill Haslam's term will end in 2018.
Four years. If he does not win the recall on June 5th, 2012, it will be less than two years. However, Scott Walker has a bill that will allow him to remain as governor for 12 years if he win the recall. The Wisconsin Senate - which is republican controlled - will pass this bill after the recall election.