The Bill of Rights are the first 10 (I believe?) Articles of the Constitution. I think your question was meant to ask: What 3 things can a President of USA do with a Bill passed by Congress? The answer is he can (a) approve it or (b) disapprove it and there is one more, which involves re-submitting it back to Congress.
do you have summary of the article 3 bill of rights
What ae 3 rights in the bill of rghts?
3 bill of rights
A president can 1)veto a bill - means to not accept it 2) sign the bill- would make the bill become law not sure what a third one can be only if he makes congress check it again i guess.
What is article 3 section 13 of the Philippine bill of rights
What is article 3 section 13 of the Philippine bill of rights
3
To add a bill of rights! :3 US history
3
veto it or pass it. 2nd Answer: Good answer, but the president can also simply not veto or sign it, but let it just sit there. Here's how it works: The President has 10 days, not counting Sundays to sign or veto a bill. If (s)he does neither and Congress is in session, the bill then passes just as if (s)he signed it. If (s)he does neither, and Congress is out of session, even if the President already has the bill, then the bill fails. This is called a 'pocket veto'. (Put the bill in your pocket and forget about it.)
James Madison and Ben Franklin created the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights states the peoples Rights.
Yes infact it does. This was tacked on to the constitution because 3 states would not sign it because it lacked the listing of the people's rights. I am in 7th grade and am learning about it right now!Answer:Actually, the United States Bill of Rights does not list the rights of the people, at all. Rather, every amendment specifies things the government may not do to deprive people of their rights.The authors of the Bill of Rights were quite clear on their philosophy; the people inherently have rights, it is not the purpose of the Bill of Rights to grant them those rights. The purpose of the Bill of Rights is to prevent the government from taking those rights away.This is emphasized by the Ninth Amendment. It states that the Bill of Rights is not intended to be a complete list; it recognizes that the people have many other rights which are not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution or its amendments, and they are not lesser rights simply because they are not listed.