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It is called an over-ride. It happens when both houses (senate and house of representitives) over-ride the veto with a 2/3 majority.

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11y ago

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Which happens if congress overrides the veto of the bill?

It becomes law.


Which happens if Congress overrides the veto of a bill?

It becomes law.


What happens if the senate overrides the presidents veto?

Then whatever the Bill is, goes into the law.


What happens if Congress overrides the veto of a bill?

If Congress overrides Presidential veto of a bill then it will become a law. A two-thirds or greater vote is needed in both the House and the Senate for this to happen.


A vetoes bill can still become a law if congress overrides the presidents veto with what majority?

by two thirds vote of the senate. which is 66% of the majority.


What happens if the president holds onto a bill for more than 10 days without signing it?

It is called a pocket veto. Therefore unless Congress overrides it the veto stands.


What branch overrides a veto?

The branch that overrides a presidential veto in the United States is the legislative branch, which is responsible for passing laws. Congress can override a veto with a two-thirds majority vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.


What happens after the president vetoes a bill?

After the president vetoes a bill, it goes back to Congress. Congress can try to override the veto with a two-thirds majority vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. If Congress successfully overrides the veto, the bill becomes law despite the president's objection. If Congress does not override the veto, the bill does not become law.


Presidents checks Congress through what?

The veto.


Why would congress veto the president's veto?

Your terminology is not quite correct. Congress does not veto a veto, it overrides a veto. And the reason for doing so would be that the members of Congress are determined to have their way. If they can muster enough votes, they have the power to put through their legislation, with or without the approval of the President.


What happens if a president vetoes a bill and how can Congress respond to the veto?

If a president vetoes a bill, it means they reject it and it does not become a law. Congress can respond to the veto by trying to override it with a two-thirds majority vote in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. If Congress successfully overrides the veto, the bill becomes a law without the president's approval.


which scenario is an accurate example of how branches of the federal government can check each other’s power?

The president vetoes a law passed by Congress, but Congress overrides the veto with a two-thirds majority vote. (APEX)