It goes back to Congress and back to the house it originally came from.
It goes back to Congress and back to the house it originally came from.
In this case it dies just as if it had never been passed.
The bill "dies" Meaning it does not become LAW
Yes, a veto can be overridden with a 2/3 Congressional majority.
It goes back to Congress and back to the house it originally came from.
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.
Congress can take a revote. If the bill passes a two-thirds majority, the the veto is overridden. If it does not, the veto stands.
Vetoes are overridden by 2/3 vote from The House and Senate.
Methods which are declared final cannot be overridden.
If the President vetoes a bill and refuses to sign it into law, the Congress can override his veto with a 2/3 majority vote in each house of Congress.
When a US president refuses to sign a bill into law, for various reasons, the bill can be vetoed. If so, the Congress can summon a majority, two thirds for example, and the veto is overridden.
John Tyler was the first to have a veto overridden.