yes
President Vetoing a law passed by congressCongress overriding a Presidents VetoThe court can declare congressional and presidential acts to be unconstitutional. Congress can override a president's veto. The president appoints supreme court judges.In the American Government, when the President vetoes something, it gets sent back to Congress to be reviewed again and Congress can override that if they believe the President's decision is unfair.
The purpose of the President is to act as the Head of State and the Commander in Chief of the Armed Services. He or she is responsible for enforcing laws that are given by Congress.
The executive branch is responsible for putting laws into force. The legislature enacts the laws for the executive. The executive also enforces the will and judgments of the courts. In federal government cabinet agencies under the president enforce laws and regulations.
The branch of government responsible for enforcing laws is the executive branch. In the United States, this branch is headed by the President, who is responsible for implementing and enforcing federal laws. The executive branch includes agencies such as the Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Department of Homeland Security, which are tasked with upholding and enforcing laws at the federal level.
The US government is made of three branches. Judicial, Executive, & Legislative.The Judicial is made of the 9 Justices & Supreme Court, which enforces the law, and decides whether certain cases are fair or not.Executive is made of the President, and his people. Their job is to accept or veto the laws written by Congress. If accepted, the law is signed by the president, and begins enforcement on a specific day. If vetoed, that means the President puts a stamp saying he doesn't agree, for the Congress to either disregard, or edit & make changes.Legislature is made of the Congress which in the US case is made of two parties. The Senate and the Representatives. Senate is 2 per state, (100 total)& Representatives are depending on the state's size & population. They write the laws based which are given to the Executive to approve or veto.So neither of the three branches become too powerful, the System of Checks and Balances was established. This means each branch is checked on, and checks on the either two branches to make sure they are all equal. Including the president. (Barack Obama has equivalent power to Supreme Court, & Senators. Only difference is Senate is for a state, president is for the country.)Hope this helps!
The President of the United States has the power to veto laws
the president
The President of the United States has the power to veto laws
the president had the power to veto laws.
The President
The president
The President can veto laws made by the legislative branch. The President can veto a law because he thinks it is unneeded.
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true
Yes, he can veto laws passed in Congress, but then Congress can vote again, and if they get a sufficient number of votes, can override the president's veto.
It is the president in the Executive Branch that can veto laws.
the president add on : in each state,the Gouvenor can veto state laws passed by the state legislature as can mayors veto city council ordances