make the bill die
The president signs a bill after the legisilative branch approves it. The president (executive branch) enforces or carries out a law ( or bill. )
The President, because he is the highest rank of the Executive Branch. So the answer is the President or the Executive branch.
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.
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 (The President) has the authority to veto a bill. However, if the Legislative branch gets a 2/3 majority behind a bill, the veto can be overruled.
it reaches obamma after the judicial branch approves it.
In the United States, the president.
No. The legislative branch can over-ride a veto of the Chief Executive (e.g.: President or Governor), but they have no power of veto over themselves.The Legislative Branch proposes the bills that are forwarded to the Executive Branch for the Executive's signature or veto.There is no provision in the Consltitution for the Legislative Branch to veto its own bill.
Yes the executive branch meaning the President can veto a bill.
If a president says no to a bill, it's called a veto. Then after that, he has to send it to Congress which is the Judical Branch. Then Congress looks over the bill, and they can override the bill and it can still be passed.
The President can veto it,but the Congress can surpass the President's veto with a 2/3 vote.
In order for the Legislative Branch to pass a bill into law, the President (Executive Branch) must sign it. The President can check the Legislative Branch by vetoing it: not signing a bill into law. The President nominates candidates for Supreme Court Justices (Judicial Branch). In doing this, he checks the Judicial Branch by nominating candidates that would balance the power in the Supreme Court (or tip it into his favor).