he must veto the bill
To make a bill a law, the president signs it. However, if the president takes no action before the time for the president's action expires, and Congress is still in session, the bill automatically becomes law.
When the president veto's a bill, he must return the bill to the members of congress. Congress can then vote again or change the bill.
For the bill to become law, the President must sign the bill, or Congress must override his or her veto. So, if the President forgot about the bill, it would not become law.
you must live in the united states for 14 years in order to be elligible to be president
I think you are referring to how a bill becomes a law. A bill must pass both houses of congress and then the president must sign it.
Each statement about bills becoming laws is true except for the notion that a bill can become law without being passed by both houses of Congress. In the United States, a proposed bill must be approved by a majority in both the House of Representatives and the Senate before it can be sent to the President for approval or veto. Additionally, a bill must also be signed by the President or passed again by Congress with a two-thirds majority to become law after a veto.
A bill goes to the house of representatives (435 people), is the majority of them say yes then the bill moves onto the Senate (100 people). If the majority of the Senate says yes. (If there is a tie then the Vice President votes on the bill breaking the tie.)Then the bill goes to the President. If the President gets the law and never says anything for ten days the bill automatically becomes a 'pocket veto' and it can try this process of becoming a law again and again. If the President says no then the bill automatically becomes a 'veto' and can try the process of becoming a law as many times as it wants.BUT when a law become a veto it has the chance to 'override' the president (if over half of the House of Representatives say yes then it moves to the Senate- If over half of the senate say yes then the law can skip past the Presidents answer and it automatically becomes a law.)[BILL]-[SENATE]-[PRESIDENT]-[LAW]+(OVERRIDE)
For a federal law: The President must sign it. For a state law: The Governor must sign it. If the bill is vetoed by the Chief Executive, it can be returned to the legislature and by majority vote of that body they can over-ride the veto, and the bill will beome law without the chief executive's signature.
Most bills start in committees. A bill that passes committee is then voted on in the full house or senate. A bill must pass the house and the senate, and then it goes to the president.
No approval is needed. He is sworn in by any court official and becomes the president.
No. The vice-president must be eligible to be President, which Bill is not, having already served two terms as President.
bill must be given and identifying title and number