Two thirds.
66.6%
The bill that the President has vetoed must be passed with a 2/3 favorable vote in both houses of Congress in order to become law.
It is dead, just as if he had used the traditional veto. There is one major difference. A bill that is pocket vetoed does not automatically go back to Congress for consideration of an override of the veto. Such a bill must be re-introduced as a new bill at the start of the next Congressional session. Then it gets treated as a new bill, meaning it canbe passed by simple majority, sent to the president for approval and vetoed (or not) in the usual fashion. Then it goes back to Congress for consideration of an override of the veto.
No. If the bill is vetoed by the President the bill goes back the congress where in order for it to get passed two thirds of congress has to vote for it.
After a bill has been vetoed it has the choice of either being brought back by a 2/3 majority vote from the senate to override the Presidents veto. Either that or the president goes and sux a dick
Any bills passed by the House of Representatives can be vetoed by the President. The President may veto the entire bill or any part of it.
they can override any bill that the president has vetoed
Override a veto
If congress gets a two/thirds majority, then they can override the president's veto.
Congress can override a presidential veto with a 2/3 majority vote.
Congress can override the veto by a 2/3s vote in both the House and Senate.
It requires two thirds of Congress to override a Presidential veto.
no. the president is the third part it has to go through. but if he vetoed it they can override him.
The best example of checks and balances is that the president can veto any bill passed by Congress, but a two-thirds vote in Congress can override the veto.
There is no other word for it- it is a vetoed bill and does not become a law unless Congress overrides the veto by passing it again with a 2/3 majority. If Congress does not override the veto, the veto is said to be sustained.
If the President vetoes a bill, Congress can override the veto and make the bill law despite the veto by passing it again with a 2/3 favorable vote in both houses.
The bill that the President has vetoed must be passed with a 2/3 favorable vote in both houses of Congress in order to become law.
He can veto a bill proposed by Congress. Then again, Congress can check the President by overriding the veto with a 2/3 majority vote from both houses.