The President
The executive branch signs bills into law, but the Legislative branch makes the laws in the first place.
The Branch Of Government that signs bills into law is the Executive Branch.
When the Senate and the House approve a bill, they send it to the President. If he agrees with the law, he signs it and the law goes into effect. Thus, the answer is the executive branch that actually signs the bill into law seeing that the president is the head of the executive branch.
The Executive Branch
The executive branch signs the laws
Executive, because the Federal executive (president) vetoes bills from our national legislature (Congress) and the governers (state executives) veto bills from our state legislatures.
The executive branch (aka the president) checks the legislative branch (aka congress) by either signing or vetoing bills submitted to him, and by submitting bills to the legislative branch.
The executive branch (aka the president) checks the legislative branch (aka congress) by either signing or vetoing bills submitted to him, and by submitting bills to the legislative branch.
Executive Branch
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the legislative branch can check the executive branch by passing law 2/3 vote over a veto from the executive branch or the executive branch can veto all of the bills sent from the legislative branch.
the legislative branch can check the executive branch by passing law 2/3 vote over a veto from the executive branch or the executive branch can veto all of the bills sent from the legislative branch.