When the Senate and the House approve a bill, they send it to the President. If he agrees with the law, he signs it and the law goes into effect. Thus, the answer is the executive branch that actually signs the bill into law seeing that the president is the head of the executive branch.
The Executive Branch which consists of the leadership (US President and state Governors) signs legislation into law, making them official.
The president
what branch signs the bills
President
The Branch Of Government that signs bills into law is the Executive Branch.
The executive branch signs bills into law, but the Legislative branch makes the laws in the first place.
The President
The President signs U.S. federal bills into law.
The executive branch signs the laws
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.
Executive Branch
Alan Branch is number 90 on the Buffallo Bills.
The Executive Branch
The bills proposed and discussed in the legislative branch grow out of committee's. Committee's meet and study bills before presenting them to the House or Senate.
Comgress
The Legislative branch of the government introduces bills to become law.