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Article 1, Section 9 "No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed."
A bill goes to the house of representatives (435 people), is the majority of them say yes then the bill moves onto the Senate (100 people). If the majority of the Senate says yes. (If there is a tie then the Vice President votes on the bill breaking the tie.)Then the bill goes to the President. If the President gets the law and never says anything for ten days the bill automatically becomes a 'pocket veto' and it can try this process of becoming a law again and again. If the President says no then the bill automatically becomes a 'veto' and can try the process of becoming a law as many times as it wants.BUT when a law become a veto it has the chance to 'override' the president (if over half of the House of Representatives say yes then it moves to the Senate- If over half of the senate say yes then the law can skip past the Presidents answer and it automatically becomes a law.)[BILL]-[SENATE]-[PRESIDENT]-[LAW]+(OVERRIDE)
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.
no bill of attainder or ex post facto law shall be passed. I think. Lol sorry I'm not of much help lol.
If Congress cannot override a Presidential veto with a two-thirds majority, the bill in that form cannot become law. However, new legislation seeking to accomplish the same thing can be reintroduced at a later date, possibly with the portions to which the President objected removed, when it must go through the entire legislative cycle again.
If the President vetoes a bill, he sends it back to the House or Senate. If the House and Senate still think that the bill should become a law, both houses have to take a vote again. And if two thirds of both the House and Senate vote "Yea" or Yes, then they "Override" the President's veto and the bill becomes a law.
No, because say the fate of a bill that might become a law is if it is constitutional or not. It is important that the nine justices have the power to declare if the bill about to be made a law ins unconstitutional.
Article 1, Section 7 says that all bills that would raise revenue must begin in the House of Representatives, but that the Senate can propose amendments to revenue bills as well as agreeing or disagreeing with the bills. Article 1, Section 7 also deals with the presidential veto. All bills must go before the president and he must either sign it, or send it back for revisions. If the president signs it, the bill goes into law. If he doesn't sign it and ten days pass (Sundays aren't included), the bill will become law. The only exception to this is if the Congress adjourns before the ten days pass, which prevents bills from becoming law unless signed by the president. If a bill is sent back to Congress for revision, it can become law without the president's signature if both houses of Congress vote yes on it with a 2/3 vote. The last thing that Article 1, Section 7 says is that all bills must go before the president to be signed. The only exception is bills that would adjourn Congress.
no. Use an with article.
say no to crackers
I would say "he mentioned the key points of the article". Or "he summarized the article well".
According to the Constitution, the legislature has the power to override the veto of the governor. It usually takes a two third majority to override. If the veto is overridden, the bill becomes law.