an override
No. Congress passes legislation.
All. Presidents do not pass budgets. Congress does.
The chief legislature is the role the President is fulfilling when the President proposes a highway construction bill to Congress and then pressures lawmakers to pass the proposed legislation.
Congress can pass a vetoed bill with a two-thirds majority vote in both houses.
He can but he needs Congress to make that, since Congress makes laws they will have to vote yes and the president of course has the final say around, or they can outvote the presidents decline.
Presidents cannot pass legislation. It is congress that makes the laws, and then the president either signs them or vetoes them. But presidents can and do encourage congress to pass certain bills; President Obama, like all presidents before him, has had a number of pieces of legislation he wanted congress to pass. In some cases, they did; in others, they did not.
Congress can pass a BILL over the President's veto making it a law.
No. Congress passes legislation.
false
Congress DOES have the power to pass a bill into law over a Presidential veto.
Sometimes.
Tonkin gulf Resolution
Congress can pass new legislation
Absolutely not. The constitution is very clear about that: the President can ask, suggest, bully or beg Congress to legislate, but only the Congress can write (and pass) a law. The president can veto any legislation he doesn't like, which makes it harder for Congress to pass it, but it is still possible to pass legislation over the President's objection.
All. Presidents do not pass budgets. Congress does.
Actually, presidents do not make the laws. Only congress can make the laws. Presidents will promote or push their priorities and try to encourage congress to turn those priorities into laws. Presidents need to work closely with congress, since no bills will pass unless congress agrees to pass them, no matter how much a president might want something done.
Legislation. The procedure for doing this is spelled out in Article I of the Constitution.