The two types of veto that can be carried out by the president are the "Pocket Veto" and the "Regular Veto." The Pocket Veto is where the president is given a bill, but fails to sign it within the ten days of the adjournment of Congress. The Pocket Veto is less common. The Regular Veto is one in which the president returns the bill back to Congress, with a message explaining his problems, reasons for return, and recommendations for revision. From there Congress may or may not fix it depending on it's actual importance.
There is the veto,pocket veto and item veto. The veto is what the governor uses when he rejects the whole bill. The item veto is when it strikes a specific item in the bill. Finally, the pocket veto is when the governor fails to take action on the bill within 30 days when the bill was first given to them. Then the entire bill fails to become a law. :(
The President may use a regular veto, pocket veto, and line item veto.
I think I know two...
A pocket Veto, in whcih he indirectly vetos a law,
and a line item veto, in which he only vetos one line.
The President has the power to veto any bill passed by Congress. There are three ways he can accomplish this, the full veto, the pocket and the line.
"normal" veto
line-item veto
pocket veto
pocket veto,veto
mainly three types of spring loaded centrifugal governors
When a Governer approves parts of a bill and vetos others, it is called using a "line item veto."
Governors
vetoes
If they are automatics, they will bolt up but they will not shift. They use different types of governors. The 1995 is mechanical, while the 1997 is electronic.If they are automatics, they will bolt up but they will not shift. They use different types of governors. The 1995 is mechanical, while the 1997 is electronic.
nothing
Legislative branch
It is the same word in Spanish "veto" and "vetos".
Te Legislative branch overrides vetos
There have been Spanish Governors, Mexican Governors, US Military Governors, US Territorial Governors and US State Governors, There have been Elected Governors, Appointed Governors, Temporary Governors, Cruel Governors, Corrupt Governors, Republican Governors, Democratic Governors, Famous Governors and Infamous Governors, Good and Bad Governors. The severed head of at least one Governor was once displayed in the Plaza in front of the Palace of the Governors. The long list covering 400 years of leadership in what is now the State of New Mexico begins with Don Juan de Onate and ends in 2010 with Bill Richardson and to date includes no women. Keep in mind as you fill in the gap between these two that for 12 years during the Pueblo Revolt, the office existed but was held by people who never set foot in New Mexico.
They are Territorial Governors.
about 46 governors