"Yes, if there is significant support for it in each chamber. It usually requires a 2/3 vote."
The line-item veto would allow the President to veto just certain items in an appropriations bill. However, it was ruled unconstitutional and so is not allowed in the US.
This is called a line item veto. The US president does not have this power at present.
The line item veto is used only in budget bills
When a Governer approves parts of a bill and vetos others, it is called using a "line item veto."
The governor of a state may veto an item of any type of bill without vetoing the whole bill. This action is called an item, line veto.
Line Item veto.
Line- item veto
The 104th Congress gave the President a line item veto. It was introduced by Bob Dole in the Senate, and signed into law by Bill Clinton. The Line Item Veto Act of 1996 was subsequently ruled unconstitutional.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a line-item veto is unconstitutional because the U.S. Constitution specifies that when presented with a bill that has been passed by Congress, the President's choices are limited to either signing the bill, making it a law, or returning it to where it originated along with his/her objections to it. Therefore, line-item veto power requires that the U.S. Constitution be amended to expand the President's choices when presented with a bill that Congress has passed.
Yes, because the line-item veto is the power of the Texas governor to reject only some provisions of a spending bill.
ho- the US president does not have a line-item veto. He must either veto the whole bill or let it go either with his signature or not.
Its usually referred to as a Line Item Veto