no
no no
No - the president has no official role in the amendment process.
Not on his own. He can introduce amendments all he wants, but the consent of everybody else is needed. (Senate, House of Representatives, and something else.) If all three of those guys sign for the ratification of an amendment, then it is the president's choice to either ratify or veto it.
becuase obama is president
Only the States can ratify a constitutional amendment. The President can veto legislation putting the amendment up for ratification, but can be overridden by the normal process in the Senate.
south ratify the 13th amendment
The states in the South had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment.
The states in the South had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment.
what is the time limit for states to ratify an amendment
you need 3/4 of a fraction to be used to ratify a Constitutional Amendment
Tennessee was the only Southern state to ratify the 14th amendment.
Illinois was the first state to ratify the 13th Amendment because they wanted Abraham Lincoln's home state to be the first to ratify they amendment.