The line-item veto is a legislative power that allows a president or governor to reject specific provisions or items in a bill without vetoing the entire legislation. This authority enables leaders to eliminate unnecessary or objectionable spending while still approving the rest of the bill. However, the line-item veto has been a subject of legal and political debate, with the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 1998 that it was unconstitutional for the president to exercise this power. Currently, only some state governors have line-item veto authority.
veto
full of veto
No. The President only has one choice to veto or to pass it. Once he veto's it goes back to congress where they can kill it or they can override his veto with 2-3 majority.
The plural for the noun veto is vetoes.The plural possessive form is vetoes'.
Veto
The veto and the pocket veto are two ways that the _____ can reject a bill
by overriding the veto
veto
Sign it, veto it, do a pocket veto.
The plural of veto is vetoes.
There is no such thing as a "recall veto"
The two types of veto that can be carried out by the president are the "Pocket Veto" and the "Regular Veto." The Pocket Veto is where the president is given a bill, but fails to sign it within the ten days of the adjournment of Congress. The Pocket Veto is less common. The Regular Veto is one in which the president returns the bill back to Congress, with a message explaining his problems, reasons for return, and recommendations for revision. From there Congress may or may not fix it depending on it's actual importance.