if congress is not in session, after ten days of doing nothing (not refusing or signing), the bill does not become law. this is called a pocket veto.
if congress is in session, and the bill is not rejected or signed, i believe that after ten days, the bill automatically becomes law.
A 'bill' is what the legislation is called before it becomes a 'law.'
The president of the US can return a bill, unsigned, to Congress with a statement of his objections. This is called a veto.The president has ten days, not including Sundays, to decide whether to sign or veto a bill. If he takes no action, after ten days the bill automatically becomes law, whether the president signs it or not.However, if the president does not sign a bill and Congress adjourns before the ten day period is up, the bill does not become law. This is called a pocket veto.
A bill that becomes a law is called an act.
If a bill is unsigned by the president after 10 days while Congress is in session, it automatically becomes law without the president's signature. However, if Congress adjourns during that 10-day period, the bill does not become law; this is known as a "pocket veto." In this case, the bill simply dies and does not take effect.
A bill.
The President can sign the bill into law, can veto it, or can leave it unsigned until it expires. (The latter is called a "pocket veto".)
The bill dies. However, the bill can still become a law if Congress overrides the veto with a 2/3 vote. If the president initially does nothing, no signature or veto, the bill automatically becomes law after 10 days, excluding Sundays, if Congress is still in session. If after 10 days Congress is NOT in session, then the bill dies. This is called a pocket veto.
yes
Senate
a statute in draft before it becomes a law.
the president
Because the bill stage is the stage before a bill becomes a law. Then bill is not yet offical.