A veto from a governor can be overturned by the state legislature through a supermajority vote. This typically requires a two-thirds majority in both the state House and Senate, although the exact requirements can vary by state. If the legislature successfully achieves this threshold, the veto is overridden, and the bill becomes law despite the governor's objections.
I think is when congress overturn a president veto
legislative branch can overturn a veto with a 2/3 vote of the law
"Veto".
To overturn the president's veto of a bill 2/3rds of the congress needs to approve.
the right or power of a president or governor to reject bills
Yes! A governor may veto the bill, but then it would take a 3/5 vote from both houses (Senate and House of Representatives) to override the governor's veto. If the governor does nothing with the bill for 60 days it automatically becomes a law.
The Governor's Veto - 1913 was released on: USA: 31 December 1913
The power of veto, budgetary formation, and being the commander-in-chief of the state's military forces are three of the powers the governor has over the legislative branch. They also have the power to overturn death penalty issues.
yes he does as well as the pocket veto
No
any decision the president makes they can overturn it
when two thirds of each House of Congress agree to do so