The Governor's Veto - 1913 was released on:
USA: 31 December 1913
yes
All governors have the power to veto bills the legislature has passed. Indeed , most governors have greater veto power than the President of the United States has.
All governors have the power to veto bills the legislature has passed. Indeed , most governors have greater veto power than the President of the United States has.
a line item veto
a line item veto
The governors, as chief executive of states have veto powers to oversee spending of monies and budgeting. Using veto powers, governors can influence spending priorities in the states.
veto
Rx
When a Governer approves parts of a bill and vetos others, it is called using a "line item veto."
It is Latin for "I forbid". The president and state governors have the power to veto legislation, which means to reject it -- prevent it from becoming law.
Yes. According to the related link all state governors except those of Indiana, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Rhode Island, and Vermont have some form of the line-item veto available.
The power that allows certain governors to reject only parts of a spending bill is referred to as the line item veto. Only a few governors have this option. Most governors must accept the entire bill or veto the entire bill.