When the Senate and the House approve a bill, they send it to the President. If he agrees with the law, he signs it and the law goes into effect. Thus, the answer is the executive branch that actually signs the bill into law seeing that the president is the head of the executive branch.
When the president signs the bill, it becomes law. If the president refuses, the bill is vetoed, but if a two thirds vote by Congress, it can still become law.
The president signs a bill after the legisilative branch approves it. The president (executive branch) enforces or carries out a law ( or bill. )
A bill does become a law when a president signs it, but a bill can also become a law without the presidents signature.
Yes, the president can sign a bill that become a law.
president
Law.
IN the US, a bill that has been passed by Congress become law when the President signs it.
He signs the bill to make it a law.
He can page it,send it to the Senate,or send it to court laws.
That would be the President of the United States, after passage by the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.
The bill only goes back to congress if the President vetoes the bill. The President lists the reasons he would not sign the bill.