Governors in all but seven states may exercise a line-item veto on bills that involve spending or taxing. Indiana, Maryland, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Rhode Island, and Vermont are the seven states that do not allow the line-item veto.
The line item veto is used only in budget bills
Yes
Yes, because the line-item veto is the power of the Texas governor to reject only some provisions of a spending bill.
Line Item veto.
The Governor of Georgia does have line-item veto power. The Georgia General Assembly can override the governor's veto, with a two-thirds majority in each chamber.
I know for a fact that California has "line-item" veto. Not sure if that's the same thing as item veto. Hope this helps : )
The line item veto allows the chief executive in this case, the governor to remove some spending items from the budge. Therefore, the governor of Georgia can make changes on the budget even after its approval.
Line item veto.
If a governor rejects only a portion of a bill rather than the entire thing, he or she has exercised a line item veto. This allows the governor to eliminate specific provisions or spending items from a bill without rejecting the entire legislation. Line item vetoes are often used to remove sections that the governor disagrees with or believes are unnecessary.
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.
He or she is the commander in chief of Virginia's armed forces, all communications with other states or foreign powers and has the right to fill all vacant state offices not reserved to the legislature and retains the right of the line item veto.