Laws are acts that are signed by the president of passed by Congress over his veto.
The President can show disapproval of a bill that has been passed by congress by vetoing the bill. Congress, however, can override a presidential veto.
He can veto it.
After a law has been passed by Congress and signed by the President, it is officially a law. To be initiated, many laws must be implemented by an agency of the government, typically housed under the executive branch.
If a bill has been signed and approved by both houses, it goes to the president. The president then can veto (reject) it or sign it (then it becomes a law). If the president vetos the bill, then Congress can override the veto with a 2/3rds vote majority passing the bill in both houses. If this occurs, the bill becomes a law.
the law is poopo
No.
A president can veto a bill that the congress passes and sends to him for his signature and he can refuse to sign it (vetoing it). But the president cannot override vetos. The congress can override president's veto by a 2/3 vote.
The court does nothing in this case. The job of the court is to review laws that have been passed by Congress. It has no say about bills that are defeated by a veto or other fail to be passed.
After it has been approved by a Senate majority vote.
IN the US, a bill that has been passed by Congress become law when the President signs it.
Once Congress has passed a bill, the President has 10 days to sign it, and it becomes law, or veto it, and send it back to Congress.If the President does not sign or veto the bill in 10 days, it becomes law without the Presidents signature, if Congress is in session. If the President does not sign or veto it in 10 days, and Congress is NOT in session, it is vetoed, called a pocket veto.
All bills and all joint resolutions which are not constitutional amendments must be signed by the President. This is part of the checks and balances of a democratic government. The President has the right to veto all proposed law sent to him for signing. If he or she vetoes, such cannot become law before it has not been self-enacted by at least 2/3 of both houses. Concurrent resolutions may be passed by Congress without presidential approval but these have, in most cases, not the effect of a law. Congress can only make legal decissions over its own property, e.g. the Capital Rotunda, without the President's signature.