No. Coming from Massachusetts, I do not want, nor would I accept a full repeal of the new health care law: this law has been very helpful and very popular in Massachusetts, and I expect a similar reaction nationally, once people find out the facts about it. The Affordable Care Act has already done some very important things, and as it is more fully implemented, it will do even more.
Based on what I have seen here, the plan (designed by then-governor Mitt Romney) has led to this state having among the highest numbers of people with insurance. I understand that many Republican politicians want to demonize "ObamaCare," but it will expand health care access to millions of Americans, and keep people with pre-existing conditions from being denied insurance. I think those are good results. I enclose a link about what the plan will and will not do, and since this is an opinion question, I fully expect that other people who read my answer will have a different opinion.
All bills passed by Congress must be signed by the President. The President has the power to accept or veto bills by Congress.
Bill Clinton had conflicts with congress because he was a Democratic President and the Republicans controlled Congress. He could get his health care reform bill passed.
No, it did not get passed by congress. In 1993, President Bill Clinton, assisted by his wife, First Lady Hillary Clinton, tried to promote a health care reform plan. But it proved very unpopular and the two were ultimately forced to abandon any efforts to get health care reform passed.
the congress can veto a law the president passed
Laws are acts that are signed by the president of passed by Congress over his veto.
A president can veto a bill that is passed by Congress
The President
The President can show disapproval of a bill that has been passed by congress by vetoing the bill. Congress, however, can override a presidential veto.
They can try to override the veto.
The president can veto a bill that congress has passed.
yes
true