the United States Constitution
no
The president can convince congress to pass a bill, and the president can then sign the bill into a law.
persidents can veto it or pass the bill and make it a law
I think you are referring to how a bill becomes a law. A bill must pass both houses of congress and then the president must sign it.
To pass a bill to the president, there must be a majority vote in both houses (over 50%). If the president vetoes the bill, it still may pass, except this time it needs a 2/3 majority vote from both houses.
A veto is when the president decides against a bill brought befrore him.
if the president vetos (or refuses to sign a bill) 2/3 of the senate can over ride it.
They can reject it or pass it to the president to sign.
all they can do is revise it
No, they do not pass laws, they pass Bills. Technically they pass a Bill which, once it passes both house of Congress is sent to the President and when the President signs it, THEN it becomes a law.
The president can convince congress to pass a bill, and the president can then sign the bill into a law.
The chief legislature is the role the President is fulfilling when the President proposes a highway construction bill to Congress and then pressures lawmakers to pass the proposed legislation.