Regulatory agencies, such as the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), may make informal changes to policies or guidelines through internal memos or informal meetings. The Executive branch, specifically the President or relevant department heads, may also make informal changes through executive orders or internal policy directives.
being stupid
The quick and dirty answer? The People, if you are talking about amendments to the US Constitution. Amendments might be written by anyone, but they don't become law until The People ratify them. There are no governmental over-rides to amendments that The People make. No judge, no legislator or act of congress, no president has any veto power whatsoever.
Many of the amendments guarantee our rights against governmental abuse of power. some of them include; 1. 2nd ( you have the right to bear arms) 2. 3rd (government cannot make you quarter troops unless Congress ordered) 3. 4th (un reasonable searches and seizures), and so on.
There are no " informal amendments". We have 27 amendments to the constitution. The ones we have go through a process of getting written, discussed, and then voted on. Many have been written but never make it through the process. It needs to be a hard process because we just don't want any silly idea or ideological junk added.
The regulatory bodies that govern accounting practices are Securities and Exchange Commission, the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, the Financial Accounting Standards Board and the Governmental Accounting Standards Board. These regulatory bodies make sure companies file their accounting statements correctly.
Amendments 1 - 10
amendments
make a proposal
amendments
Yes
It isn't. Amendments are the only 'legal' way to make changes to the Constitution. Changes by other methods, including aberrant and tortured reasoning or interpretations by any governmental branch are usurpations (stealing) by the federal government of powers belonging to the states and the people.