The Legislative Branch (Congress) makes the laws. The law they make then goes to the Executive Branch (the President). The President can either sign the law, to make it become an actual United States Law, or he can veto it. To veto means to not approve a law passed by Congress. If two-thirds of both houses of Congress (House of Representatives and Senate) agree, Congress can override the President's veto.
The House of Representatives makes laws for the United States as whole. However, any law passed by the house needs the approval of the Senate and Presidential approval.
The duties and responsibilities of the legislative branch mainly including creating, debating and passing laws. The laws will be enacted by the presidential assent.
Approval of major presidential appointments.
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No. Article 2 allows him appointments, foreign policy agreements and treaties subject to Senate approval. It does not give him power to change details of laws.
A presidential legislative democracy is a system of government that has a legislative branch that makes laws. The presidential or executive branch carries out the policies and laws.
A senator sits in the governmental group that creates and works for approval of treaties with foreign nations, approves or denies major appointments of the President, and votes to approve or deny passing of bills to become new laws or changes to existing laws.
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what two laws did the radical republicans pass to reduce presidential power
Once a bill passes both the Senate and House of Representatives, it is sent to the President for his approval. If he veto it, then that bill has to be passed by 2/3 majority of the congress, then it become law without presidential consent.
Prime Ministers
They all interact by passing or not passing the laws