Congress does that, that is the legislative branch,
The president checks the actions of the legislative branch through vetoes on bills passed by Congress.
The branch of government that can veto bills is the executive branch, typically represented by the President. Once a bill is passed by the legislative branch (Congress), the President has the option to approve the bill by signing it into law or reject it by vetoing it.
Congress passes all "bills" in which the bills then go to the president to be signed by him. The bills that get singed are now laws. The president can however do legislation without the legislative branch by passing "executive orders".
According to the Constitution, Executive branch responsibility is to execute and implement policies after it becomes a law (Bills passed by Congress). The President has the power to veto Bills though.
the duties of the Executive branch are to sign or veto bills passed by congress, Enforce laws,and to impeach the president in his/her wrongful acts
The President can veto bills passed by Congress, thus checking the Legislative Branch. The President checks the judicial branch by appointing Supreme Court justices.
The president can veto bills that are passed by Congress. This is the legislative checkpoint that can be applied by the executive branch. In addition, the president can recommend laws to Congress, call for them to meet and enforce or execute the bills they pass.
He can veto bills passed by the legislature.See, also, the "related questions" section, below, for a link to a considerably expanded answer.
The President
1. The executive branch , headed by the President, is responsible for enforcing the laws .2. The president is the commander in chief of the US armed force3. The president has to sign/veto bills (laws before they are approved)4. The president appoints federal judges and ambassadorswas to carry out the laws
The President
A bill can be sent to the president for approval after both the House and the Senate pass the bill.A bill can only be sent to the President for approval if it has been passed by both the House and the Senate. It must be passed by both chambers of Congress with a majority in favor of it.