A "pocketbook vote" means that someone is voting for the party that has promised them more money, either in lower taxes, lower business fees (for people who own businesses), better employment rates, or actual bribing. This is in contrast to a "moral vote" where a person votes on what policy they believe to be to better, even if it has adverse effects for that particular person.
you mean pocket vote or pocket veto?
He can't keep the bill. He can sign it, veto it, or do a pocket vote by letting it sit 10 days.
There are many ways in which a bill may die. This can occur when it is introduced to the House of Representatives. A bill can die when it is sent to the president of the United States and he chooses not to sign it. The president may also choose to veto the bill.
An adjective. It describes the pocket, implying that it is the pocket of a pair of trousers.
vote and vote and vote and vote and vote and vote and vote and vote and vote and vote and vote
pocket calculator is a calculator that we keep in our pocket
Pocket god
Yes, the word 'pocket' is a noun (pocket, pockets), a verb (pocket, pockets, pocketing, pocketed), and an adjective. Examples: noun: You should put the cash in your pocket. verb: You can pocket the change. adjective: I put all of my pocket change in a jar.
If you vote you vote and if you do not vote then you do not vote
Roughly translated, Pokemon means pocket monsters.
Pocket money is called pocket money because money was put into the pockets.If money was in the pocket, the person could spend it
A president's veto can be overridden by Congress with a 2/3 majority in the House. If it is a pocket veto though, the veto cannot be overridden.
Yes, in the term "out of pocket", the noun is "pocket", a word for a thing.