The President refuses to sign the bill.
the president
the president
Congressional leaders believe they have the votes necessary to override a veto
Veto, Pocket Veto, and if the Senate or House rejects.
veto
The veto and the pocket veto are two ways that the _____ can reject a bill
Yes a president has the authority to delay congressional spending. The president has the power to veto legislation which may include legislation that sets appropriations for federal agencies or programs. A presidential veto of a spending bill can prevent congressional spending from taking effect. The president can also delay the spending through a line-item veto which allows the president to veto individual items within a spending bill. Additionally the president can refuse to spend money that Congress has already appropriated. This is known as a rescission and requires the president to notify Congress of his intention to delay the spending. The following steps are necessary for a president to delay congressional spending: The president must veto the spending bill. The president can veto individual items within a spending bill using a line-item veto. The president can refuse to spend money that Congress has already appropriated by issuing a rescission. The president must notify Congress of his intention to delay the spending.These steps provide the president with the authority to delay congressional spending.
A package veto is a vote of "no" by a governor or the President of the United States for the whole bill, not just a part of a bill. The right to veto allows for the vetoer to choose either a part of the bill to veto or vote no on an entire bill.
Congress can override the President's veto of a bill. They can do so by submitting the bill to both the Senate and the House of Representative for vote and both houses must reach a two-thirds vote in favor of the bill becoming a law.
When the president is checking congress when he veto or reject a bill
The rejection of a bill is commonly called "vetoing" the bill. "Veto" is Latin for "I forbid".
A pocket veto is not a direct veto of a bill. Rather, it occurs when the president holds onto a bill, unsigned, until after Congress adjourns.