None. This is because to be a "law" it MUST have been passed by congress.,
Congress cannot veto a law. Any law must be written and passed by Congress in the first place. The president can then veto it. Congress can override the veto with a 2/3 majority. After a law is passed, the Supreme Court can strike it down if they declare the law unconstitutional.
If the law is passed by votes of fewer than 2/3 of Congress, he can simply refuse to sign it into law, that is, veto it.
The President
They can try to override the veto.
the congress can veto a law the president passed
Congress has passed a new law making purple hats illegal.Example sentence: Congress has passed a law saying that driving under the age of 15 is illegal.
If a law is passed by Congress, then it goes to the president and he can either veto it or pass it as a law, but there is also the chance that the Supreme Court might find it unconstitutional.
The first fugitive slave law was passed by Congress in 1793. It allowed slaveowners to reclaim their escaped slaves in any state or territory in the United States.
In 1882, Congress passed a law which stopped immigration from the country of China. This was called the Immigration Act of 1882.
1835 law passed by Southern congress which made it illegal to talk of abolition or anti-slavery arguments in Congress
yes
nothing