Political Science, asked by abhigenius67, 10 months ago

who finaly signs the law​

Answers

Answered by anshulagarwal
0

First, a bill must pass both houses of Congress by a majority vote. After it has passed out of Congress, it is sent along to the President. If the President signs the bill, it becomes law. The President might not sign the bill,however. If he specifically rejectsthe bill, called a veto, the bill returns to Congress. There it is voted onagain, and if both houses of Congress pass the bill again, but this time by atwo-thirds majority, then the bill becomes law without the President'ssignature. This is called "overriding a veto," and is difficult to do becauseof the two-thirds majority requirement.

Alternately, the President can sit on the bill, taking no action on it atall. If the President takes no action at all, and ten days passes (notincluding Sundays), the bill becomes law without the President's signature.However, if the Congress has adjourned before the ten days passes and without aPresidential signature, the bill fails. This is known as a pocket veto.


Mayank1675: copied from internet
Answered by Mayank1675
0

Answer:

HEYA MATE....

HERE IS YOUR ANSWER...

Explanation:

At first, the bill is passed by the state government to central government. As it passes the president has to sign on the bill.As the president signs it become law and in a case if he does not sign it is rejected.

Though the law is finally signed by the President.

HOPE IT HELPS YOU.....

PLEASE MARK AS BRAINLIEST......

Similar questions