A president is not on the $10 bill, it is Alexander Hamilton
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On a $10 dollar bill is Alexander Hamilton..... Welcome;)
Actually, there is not a president on the U.S. 10 dollar bill. Alexander Hamilton is pictured on it. He was not a U.S. president, but was the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.
The man on the $10 bill was never president. Every U.S. bill in current circulation has an identifying caption below the picture. If you look at a $10 bill you'll see that the picture is that of Alexander Hamilton, who was the first Secretary of the Treasury.
the president has ten day's to veto a bill.
The president is fired
If a president hasn't touched a bill for 10 days then a Pocket Veto is Issued
10 days
The portrait on the American 10$ bill is Alexander Hamilton. Alexander Hamilton, however, was never President of USA; he was the first U.S. Secretary of the Treasury.
If the Congress is still in session, the bill becomes a law after 10 days even if the President has not signed it or vetoed it. If the President vetoed the bill, Congress has to override the veto in order for it to become a law. If the President has not signed the bill within 10 days and the Congress is not in session, it does not become a law. This is called a "pocket veto."
Normally, state laws are signed by the Governor, and federal laws are signed by the President. If the president does not sign, the bill will still become law in 10 days unless Congress goes out of session before the president has had the bill for 10 days.