veto it hope that helped.....
Yes- Bill Clinton had that honor. in 1968 and 1969.
He has to give speeches and protect the Bill of Rights.
While he was a president he wrote the bill of right.He fought in the war of 1812.
There are no documents that served as president to the bill of rights.
The President can sign the bill into law, can veto it, or can leave it unsigned until it expires. (The latter is called a "pocket veto".)
A president can 1)veto a bill - means to not accept it 2) sign the bill- would make the bill become law not sure what a third one can be only if he makes congress check it again i guess.
The Bill of Rights are the first 10 (I believe?) Articles of the Constitution. I think your question was meant to ask: What 3 things can a President of USA do with a Bill passed by Congress? The answer is he can (a) approve it or (b) disapprove it and there is one more, which involves re-submitting it back to Congress.
Yes 4 times
Yes. the bill begins, the bill is proposed, the bill is introduced,the bill goes to committee, the bill is reported, the bill is debated, the bill is voted on, the bill is referred to the senat, the bill is sent to the president, the bill is law. Now several things can happen with each step like the bill being veto, and other things
There was a 500$ dollar bill in 1928 and 1934 but i wish there where 500$ dollar bill in 2010!!! The president on the $500 bill is President William McKinley serving in office from 1897-1901. He only served 4 years.
1) Read Bill 2) Discuss Bill 3) Amend Bill 4) Vote on Bill
If the President does not sign a bill, it still becomes the law in ten days unless Congress adjourns during this 10-day period. If Congress adjourns and the President does not sign it, it dies and does not become law.