A directive by the president or governor that has the force of law is the Executive Order.
consttitution
Veto power is one power similar for the president, governor, and the mayor. The power to enact a law is another.
A joint resolution of Congress has the force of law if signed by the president. This can be passed by a simple majority in both houses.
Executive Orders.
A law when it is first proposed is a bill. When it passes both houses of the legislature and signed by the chief executive (governor or president) it then becomes a law.
force a cloture
the governor
after the: mayor governor president sign it into law
If a state law, the Governor. If federal law, the President.
They are called executive orders , one type of which is a presidential directive.
Veto
If a state law, the Governor. If federal law, the President.
Veto power is one power similar for the president, governor, and the mayor. The power to enact a law is another.
No- the president has virtually no power over a governor's decisions unless they violate federal law. If a governor defies federal law, as happened, for example, in Arkansas in 1957, the president can use federal troops to enforce the law. The president can sometimes put pressure on a governor by holding up federal funds to his state.
execution order
No. Only the State's Governor has the power to veto a state law.
Before he was President, he passed the bar and established a law practice. He was a mayor of Northhampton, state senator, Lt. Governor and Governor of Massachusetts and served as Vice-president under Harding.
Uphold the Law.