The President of the US is also the leader of his own political party (at the present time, Barack Obama is the leader of the Democratic Party) and therefore, if the President wants legislation to be introduced in Congress, he can ask the members of his party who are in Congress to do so. Nothing would prevent him from writing the bill himself, if he so desired. It is then still up to Congress to pass it, amend it, or reject it.
the bill becomes the law
The president is allowed to veto a bill he sees unconstitutional or sign off on a bill. He also has the power to make treaties.
allowed the president to use military to enforce acts of congress
Force bill
It becomes a pocket veto.
Force bill
Original person's answer: Basically, the president can convince congress to pass a bill, and the president can then sign the bill into a law. My answer: The president can veto or sign the bill.
The bill must still either be signed by the President, or allowed to become law without his signature - this can happen if Congress is in session and the President does not veto the bill within 10 days and return it to the proper congressional house.
The bill automatically dies. For a president to allow that to happen is known as a pocket veto.
The house prepares bills of revenue, but for the most part either house can prepare a bill. It has to pass BOTH before it goes to the president to sign.
No it is not. The 2nd amendment never says anything about the specific types of firearms we are allowed to own. It simply states we are allowed to own firearms. Therefore the specific types of firearms we are allowed to own is a privaledge set fourth by our lawmakers our vice president and our president. The U.S. Supreme Court ruling never says anything about the specific types of firearms we are allowed to own. Therefore it remains a privaledge set fourth by our lawmakers our vice president and our president.
A President can either sign a bill or veto it.