The president is the only one who "vetoes" bills
The Executive Branch has the power to veto legislation.
Executive branchIn the United States government, the President (the head of the Executive Branch) has the power to veto legislation.
The President has the power to veto legislation that he doesn't agree with.
The President can veto it,but the Congress can surpass the President's veto with a 2/3 vote.
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The President has the power to veto Congressional legislation.
The President can veto legislation passed by Congress
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.
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It isn't really a veto ( only the President can veto) but Congress (legislative branch) can table a law, vote it down, send it to committee, pass a law to send to the President, or send it back to the backers to rewrite it and submit again at a later date.
The Executive branch can veto laws, but if a law is unconstitutional, the other two branches can veto it to keep it from passing.