No. The legislative branch can over-ride a veto of the Chief Executive (e.g.: President or Governor), but they have no power of veto over themselves.
The Legislative Branch proposes the bills that are forwarded to the Executive Branch for the Executive's signature or veto.
There is no provision in the Consltitution for the Legislative Branch to veto its own bill.
No, the legislative branch cannot veto a bill. The veto power belongs to the executive branch, typically the president or governor, who can choose to reject a bill passed by the legislative branch.
The branch of government that can veto bills is the executive branch, typically represented by the President. Once a bill is passed by the legislative branch (Congress), the President has the option to approve the bill by signing it into law or reject it by vetoing it.
A bill is proposed legislation that must pass through the steps of the legislative process to become law. A veto is when the president or governor rejects a bill, preventing it from becoming law unless overridden by a certain majority in the legislative body.
Corruption can exist in any branch of government, including the legislative branch. Instances of corruption in the legislative branch may include bribery, kickbacks, or other unethical behavior by lawmakers in the pursuit of personal gain. Efforts to address and combat such corruption are important for maintaining the integrity and trust in the legislative process.
Presidential republic
In a parliamentary system, the executive branch is drawn from the legislative branch, with the Prime Minister being the head of government. This contrasts with a presidential system where the executive branch is separate from the legislative branch, with the President being the head of state and government.
The executive branch can also veto the bill of legislative.
The Executive Branch (The President) has the authority to veto a bill. However, if the Legislative branch gets a 2/3 majority behind a bill, the veto can be overruled.
Well, the executive branch is the only one, but the legislative branch can override his veto if 2/3 vote on it.
They may override his veto with a 2/3 vote.
The legislative branch's power is being checked when the executive vetoes bills. The veto can be overridden by a two-thirds vote in both houses.
legislative branch can overturn a veto with a 2/3 vote of the law
The Executive Branch can veto a bill proposed by the Legislative Branch. The Legislative Branch can override the president's veto with another vote on the bill; it requires a greater majority than a simple one. The Judicial Branch determines if a bill is constitutional or not. The Executive Branch nominates the members of the Supreme Court and most of the judicial branch. The Legislative Branch has to approve the nominations from the Executive Branch.
The executive branch can veto laws passed by the legislative branch.
The veto
The Legislative branch (Congress) can override the President's veto on a bill with a two-thirds vote from both the Senate and the House of Representatives.
The branch that overrides a presidential veto in the United States is the legislative branch, which is responsible for passing laws. Congress can override a veto with a two-thirds majority vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.
If the Legislative branch passes a bill, but it gets vetoed by the Executive branch, the Legislative can, with a 2/3 majority vote, override the veto and force it into law.