Asked by cayden casto
Which of these steps in the lawmaking process might happen after a bill is sent to the president?
Responses
The president can ask the house to debate it.
The president can ask the house to debate it.
The president can send it to the other house.
The president can send it to the other house.
The president can send it to committee.
The president can send it to committee.
The president can veto the bill.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The president can veto the bill.
Explanation: Once both houses of Congress send a bill to the president, the president may sign it, veto it (return it to Congress with objections), do nothing and let it become law after 10 days if Congress is in session, or exercise a pocket veto if Congress adjourns. The president cannot send the bill back to committee or to the other house to debate it.
Explanation: Once both houses of Congress send a bill to the president, the president may sign it, veto it (return it to Congress with objections), do nothing and let it become law after 10 days if Congress is in session, or exercise a pocket veto if Congress adjourns. The president cannot send the bill back to committee or to the other house to debate it.
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