It must be voted 2/3 mojority of the votes
Congress can override the Presidents veto by a Supermajority Vote (2/3 of members)
If a US president vetoes a bill sent to him by the US Congress, the president may choose to veto the bill. In such a case, the bill is sent back to the congress. If the Congress can come up with a two thirds majority, then the bill must pass as law.
Congressional Override
Yes
To override a president's veto, there needs to be a 2/3rds majority in both the House and the Senate.
The Legislative branch (Congress) can override the President's veto on a bill with a two-thirds vote from both the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Congress needs 2/3 majority from both the House of Representatives and the Senate in order to do that.
Congress can override a presidential veto
Absolutely! It's part of the checks-and-balances system.
2/3 of the congress must vote to override a veto from the president.
They can put the measure to a second vote to try and "override" the veto. If they succeed, the measure passes and becomes law, the presidents will or not. If they fail, the measure is dead - end of measure.
Congressional Override