The President can veto a bill and prevent it from becoming law, unless Congress has the two-thirds majority vote it needs to override the veto. The Supreme Court can't do anything to a bill.
The US Supreme Court can nullify an unconstitutional law, provided the law is challenged in court by someone with standing who has sustained significant injury due to the law, and there is a way for the court system to remediate the problem. The Supreme Court must wait until they are petitioned to review a lower court decision before they can evaluate the law.
The President can show disapproval of a bill that has been passed by congress by vetoing the bill. Congress, however, can override a presidential veto.
He vetoes the bill.
A president can veto a bill that is passed by Congress
The president can veto a bill that congress has passed.
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.
I don't think there's anything the president can't do after a bill has passed both chambers of Congress? He can sign it into law or he can veto it and send it back to Congress
"veto" is the term. If the President vetoes a bill passed by Congress, it must be passed by a 2/3 majority in both houses to make it law; otherwise it dies.
He can veto it.
He or she can veto it or turn it down.
After it has been approved by a Senate majority vote.
pocket vetoed
If a president says no to a bill, it's called a veto. Then after that, he has to send it to Congress which is the Judical Branch. Then Congress looks over the bill, and they can override the bill and it can still be passed.