Respuesta :

The law returns to being introduced in one of the houses. The president’s decision can be overriden by a majority of Congress.

Answer:

When the President chooses to veto a bill approved by the House of Representative and the Senate, the bill is then sent back to Congress. Typically, the President would give their reasoning in vetoing the bill. At this point, either the bill is dropped, or it is re-voted on in both the house and senate. If both houses are able to override the veto, than it becomes law.

There is another type of veto that can be used called the pocket veto, in which the president does nothing (neither signing it to law or vetoing it), allowing for the bill to expire when Congress is not in session.

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