When a president opposes a bill, he may try to stop it from becoming law by vetoing it. Many vetoes are immediate, but he has a ten-day period during which he can do it. When congress is in session, and the president vetoes a bill, the proposed bill can then goes back to congress, which can try to over-ride the president's veto. This requires a 2/3 majority in both houses of congress.
Sometimes a president can stop a bill another way. If congress is not in session, he can simply do nothing for ten days, which is called a "pocket veto," and the bill will not become law, because congress is not in session to try to over-ride it.
Ten. If he does nothing for ten days, the bill automatically becomes law. If he vetoes the bill, it goes back to Congress, which can still pass it over the President's veto with a two-thirds majority in each house.
Article 1 Section 7 states that the president has 10 days (excluding Sundays) to veto a bill or it will become law. If the President returns the bill to Congress with a letter of instruction, or veto, Congress can pass it into law with a 2/3 vote of each house. If Congress happens to adjourn during the ten days, it becomes a "pocket" veto.
The president has 10 days to sign a bill or veto other than that it will become a bill
10 days and if he doesn't sign in those 10 days that is called a pocket veto.
10 days
10 days
10 days.
10 days
johnny
its ten im Cody and i approve this message
If a president hasn't touched a bill for 10 days then a Pocket Veto is Issued
What is it called when a bill becomes law if the President does not sign it nor veto it ,after so many days?
yes: if congress has sent the bill to the president and they do not sign it after ten days, the bill becomes law
Once Congress has passed a bill, the President has 10 days to sign it, and it becomes law, or veto it, and send it back to Congress.If the President does not sign or veto the bill in 10 days, it becomes law without the Presidents signature, if Congress is in session. If the President does not sign or veto it in 10 days, and Congress is NOT in session, it is vetoed, called a pocket veto.
It passes
president signs- bill becomes LAWpresident refuses to sign - bill becomes LAW if the Pres. keeps it ten dayspresident vetoes--- sends it back to congress unsigned in less than ten days. Congress now requires a 2/3 vote to make it law or else if dies.president uses "pocket veto"-- possible only if Congress adjourns before the President has had ten days to consider the bill, In this event , the bill dies if the President does not sign it.
If a President does not sign a bill and Congress is in session, after 10 days that bill becomes law. If the President does not sign a bill and Congress is not in session, after 10 days it is vetoed. This is called a pocket veto.
He can't keep the bill. He can sign it, veto it, or do a pocket vote by letting it sit 10 days.
The bill automatically dies. For a president to allow that to happen is known as a pocket veto.