No, they can not. The President/Governor are the ones that signs a bill into law
States don't have "delegates to Congress," they have Representatives and Senators. Territories have non-voting delegates. The number of Representatives a State has is determined by its population. They each have two Senators.
435 representatives 100 senators
Maine has 2 U.S. Senators and 2 delegates in the U.S. House of Representatives.
The senators and the house of delegates are the 2 parts of the general assembly.
No. U.S. Representatives, and Senators, are members of the U.S. House and Senate, respectively. These representative, lawmaking bodies of the U.S. government make up the Legislative branch. The Judicial branch of the U.S. government is the federal court system. The third branch is the Executive, consisting of the U.S. President and his/her delegates.
The are 100 Senators in the Senate, and 435 Congressmen in the House of Representatives (not counting the six delegates with non-voting seats).
Senators+Representatives=Electors, so; 2+32=34
The state legislature has 151 state represntatives and 35 state senators. (In the US Congress, the state has 2 Senators and 2 Representatives.)
435 "representatives" that is, members of the House of representives plus a few non-voting ones like for DC. Then there are 100 Senators who "represent"; but are not called representatives. Was that a trick question?
Senators.
It has 2 Senators and The House of Representatives delegates depends ont the census. The higher population a state has, the more representatives it gets. For now, there are 10 Representatives.That's 12 electoral votes total.
2 Senators and 25 Representatives