the bill of spproval for spending public money :)
A Budget Approval
A spending bill is the allocation of how money will be spent. Often committees are established to draw up a spending bill.
appreoonriaton
laws dont involve spending money. IMplementing them costs money.
Bill of revenue start in the house.
appropriation bill (nova net)
Discretionary funds are government spending by passing an appropriations bill to pay for a program such as military spending or education. The money is raised and can only be spent on the program in the bill.
Deficit spending is the spending of money that you don't have, therefor people are concerned because taxes will increase and we will have to borrow more money to pay of that certain bill we owe but, will still owe the same amount because we will have to return the money either way so its a lose lose.
Only the House of Representatives can write appropriations (spending) bills.
endorse means to declare one's public approval or support of.
Yes a president has the authority to delay congressional spending. The president has the power to veto legislation which may include legislation that sets appropriations for federal agencies or programs. A presidential veto of a spending bill can prevent congressional spending from taking effect. The president can also delay the spending through a line-item veto which allows the president to veto individual items within a spending bill. Additionally the president can refuse to spend money that Congress has already appropriated. This is known as a rescission and requires the president to notify Congress of his intention to delay the spending. The following steps are necessary for a president to delay congressional spending: The president must veto the spending bill. The president can veto individual items within a spending bill using a line-item veto. The president can refuse to spend money that Congress has already appropriated by issuing a rescission. The president must notify Congress of his intention to delay the spending.These steps provide the president with the authority to delay congressional spending.
He signs the bill to make it a law.