Congress passes laws, which the President can then either sign, or veto.
Like ll laws, Congress and signed by the President.
No, the president and vice president do not vote on laws before they are passed by Congress. The legislative branch, which includes Congress, is responsible for drafting, debating, and voting on proposed legislation. The president's role is to either sign bills into law or veto them, while the vice president's role is to preside over the Senate and only vote in the event of a tie.
The US Congress debates and passes the laws, subject to approval by the President and the judgments of the Supreme Court.
a vice president becomes president when the president passes away Example: Vice President President President passes away Vice President becomes President (and it has been done before)
The U.S. Congress passes bills that become Federal Laws when the U.S. President signs them (although there are cases in which Congress can make a bill into a law without the President's approval), and each state Congress passes bills that become state laws when the Governor of the state signs them.
Child support is handled by the states; Congress passes laws, not the president.
The US president puts forward a bill to House of Representatives then it goes to the Senate if it passes through both of these houses it is then signed by the president. Then it goes before the Supreme Court who check to make sure it is constitutional. Then the police or FBI enforce the law by bring offenders before courts for sentences.
The Legislative Branch
both the legislature and president together
The excecutive branch of the government is the President. You know, the one who makes vetos the laws or passed them. The laws he passes are national; NOT state laws. And there's your answer.
No, they do not pass laws, they pass Bills. Technically they pass a Bill which, once it passes both house of Congress is sent to the President and when the President signs it, THEN it becomes a law.
There are two ways in which the President shapes laws. The President is the head of his political party, and he therefore can direct members of his party to introduce legislation in Congress that will advance his policies. And if Congress passes laws that he doesn't like, he can veto them (although with enough votes, Congress can override his veto).