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The President signs U.S. federal bills into law.
The Branch Of Government that signs bills into law is the Executive Branch.
If you mean the queen, she signs bills (idea of a new law) to make it a law.
The executive branch signs bills into law, but the Legislative branch makes the laws in the first place.
The President of the United States signs bills into law after the bills have been passed by the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
the President of the United States
They pass the bills to be sent to the president who either signs them and then they become a law or vetos them
The Governor of the State of Illinois signs bills that the Illinois State Legislature passes into law.
The U.S. Congress passes bills that become Federal Laws when the U.S. President signs them (although there are cases in which Congress can make a bill into a law without the President's approval), and each state Congress passes bills that become state laws when the Governor of the state signs them.
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 President signs federal bills into law. Generally, the state governor signs state bills into law. Bills passed by other legislative bodies (cities, counties, villages, townships, specials boards, etc.) are usually signed by the chief executive officer of that unit of government (mayor, county president, district supervisor, etc.).
Answer The person who signs bills to become laws is the president.He will either sign or he will veto(reject).