Examples of pocket veto in the following topics:
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- When the president receives legislation, he decides whether to veto it, use the pocket veto, sign it, or do nothing.
- In 1996, Congress attempted to enhance the president's veto power with the Line Item Veto Act.
- If the president then vetoed the new legislation, Congress could override the veto by the ordinary method of a two-thirds vote in both houses.
- Supreme Court ruled such a legislative alteration of the veto power to be unconstitutional.
- Assess the significance of the Line Item Veto for executive power
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- If the bill is vetoed, the president returns it to Congress with his objections.
- A vetoed bill can still become law if each house of Congress votes to override the veto with a two-thirds majority.
- However, if Congress is adjourned during this period, the president may veto legislation passed at the end of a congressional session simply by ignoring it.
- This maneuver is known as a pocket veto.
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- Lincoln pocket-vetoed this bill.
- In 1866, Johnson vetoed two important bills.
- Over Johnson's vetoes, Congress passed three Reconstruction acts in 1867 which divided the southern states into five military districts under the control of the Union army.
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- The president exercises a check over Congress through his power to veto bills, but Congress may override any veto (excluding the so-called pocket veto) by a two-thirds majority in each house.
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- Lincoln later pocket vetoed this new bill.
- These initially were vetoed by President Johnson, but later were overridden by Congress.
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- Some projects allow a special kind of vote known as a veto.
- With vetoes comes the problem of veto abuse.
- You can prevent veto abuse by being very reluctant to use vetoes yourself, and by gently calling it out when someone else uses her veto too often.
- Either the vetoing developer will back down, or the group will decide to weaken the meaning of a veto.
- Like votes, vetoes can apply retroactively.
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- Raise your hand if you have any change in your pocket or purse.
- P(change) means the probability that a randomly chosen person in your class has change in his/her pocket or purse.
- Find P(change and bus) Find the probability that a randomly chosen student in your class has change in his/her pocket or purse and rode a bus within the last month.
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- Count the money (bills and change) in your pocket or purse.
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- A blister is a small pocket of fluid in the upper skin layers, forming as fluid collects between the epidermis and the layers beneath.
- A blister is a small pocket of fluid within the upper layers of the skin.
- Differentiate among the various types of blisters: fluid-filled pockets between epidermis and dermis
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- In January 1866, Congress renewed the Freedmen's Bureau, which Johnson vetoed in February.
- An attempt to override the veto failed on February 20, 1866.
- This veto shocked the congressional Radicals.
- However, the Republicans in Congress overrode his veto.
- The Senate overrode the veto by the close vote of 33:15, the House by 122:41.