A bill that the governor (for a state bill) or president (for a US Congressional bill) refuses to sign is said to be VETOED.
Yes. Once the governor receives a bill, he can sign it, veto it, or do nothing. If he signs it, the bill becomes law. If he does nothing, the bill becomes law without his signature.
If the governor does not veto or pass the bill, that bill automatically becomes a law.
no
it depends
after the: mayor governor president sign it into law
Nope. The governor has 12 days (from the day the bill was transmitted) to sign it. If not signed, the bill automatically becomes a law.
The governor decides whether to sign or veto the bill.
If a state law, the Governor. If federal law, the President.
Then they veto it.
3 trillion years
The Governor General, who gives the bill Royal Assent. At the time of writing the Governor General's office is held by Quintin Bryce.