Legislative branch
legislativeLegislativethe legislative branch of government can override vetoes - e.g. Congress in the United States
legislative
The excecutive branch of the government is the President. You know, the one who makes vetos the laws or passed them. The laws he passes are national; NOT state laws. And there's your answer.
The Legislative Branch, consisting of Congress, may override the president's veto with a 2/3 majority.
Legislative/Congress
The branch that overrides a presidential veto in the United States is the legislative branch, which is responsible for passing laws. Congress can override a veto with a two-thirds majority vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.
The legislative branch (Congress) can override a bill was a 2/3 vote
The Legislative branch (Congress) can override the President's veto on a bill with a two-thirds vote from both the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Legislative Branch i.e. Congress
They can override vetoes and not approve of a judge.
legislativeLegislativethe legislative branch of government can override vetoes - e.g. Congress in the United States
Congress can override vetoes with a 2/3 vote by both the House and the Senate.