Vetoes are overridden by 2/3 vote from The House and Senate.
It depends on which president you're talking about. Franklin Pierce and Andrew Johnson had more than 50% of there vetoes overridden but many presidents had none. In more recent history George W. Bush had 33% of 12 vetoes overridden and Bill Clinton had 5% (2 out of 37) overridden.
I am not sure what you mean. Congress has overridden some presidential vetoes.
All Bills Vetoed-635 Regular Vetoes-372 Pocket Vetoes-263 Vetoes Overridden-9
because the senators believe in him
There were 106 vetoes overridden by Congress from 1789 to 2000.
They require a vote of the people
FD Roosevelt: 372 regular vetoes, 263 pocket vetoes. Only 9 were overridden.
Grover Cleveland with 304 regular vetoes, 2 overridden, and 110 pocket vetoes for a total of 414 as compared to FDR's 635.
In this case it dies just as if it had never been passed.
It goes back to Congress and back to the house it originally came from.
President Cleveland cast 414 vetoes in his two terms. 304 were regular vetoes and 110 were pocket vetoes, made when Congress was not in session. Only two of his vetoes were overridden.
Yes, I suppose you could say he won. He made 5 regular vetoes and seven pocket vetoes and not a one was overridden.