← Back to context Comment by grandempire 1 year ago What other constitutional procedures require cooperation between branches to make a decision? 10 comments grandempire Reply sdenton4 1 year ago The president signs laws, for example...... This isn't hard. grandempire 1 year ago Im not being facetious. That’s a good example. So in that case the president has a final yes/no, but no authority to rewrite.So maybe congress has a kind of veto power here? sdenton4 1 year ago Congress has lots of power, it's a question of whether they do anything. Currently the Republicans are uniformity falling in line with the authoritarian executive orders, even those that abrogate well established congressional powers. 4 replies → masfuerte 1 year ago It's not a final yes/no. A two-thirds majority in both chambers can overrule the presidential veto. For example:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55510151 1 reply → cowfriend 1 year ago yes.
sdenton4 1 year ago The president signs laws, for example...... This isn't hard. grandempire 1 year ago Im not being facetious. That’s a good example. So in that case the president has a final yes/no, but no authority to rewrite.So maybe congress has a kind of veto power here? sdenton4 1 year ago Congress has lots of power, it's a question of whether they do anything. Currently the Republicans are uniformity falling in line with the authoritarian executive orders, even those that abrogate well established congressional powers. 4 replies → masfuerte 1 year ago It's not a final yes/no. A two-thirds majority in both chambers can overrule the presidential veto. For example:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55510151 1 reply → cowfriend 1 year ago yes.
grandempire 1 year ago Im not being facetious. That’s a good example. So in that case the president has a final yes/no, but no authority to rewrite.So maybe congress has a kind of veto power here? sdenton4 1 year ago Congress has lots of power, it's a question of whether they do anything. Currently the Republicans are uniformity falling in line with the authoritarian executive orders, even those that abrogate well established congressional powers. 4 replies → masfuerte 1 year ago It's not a final yes/no. A two-thirds majority in both chambers can overrule the presidential veto. For example:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55510151 1 reply → cowfriend 1 year ago yes.
sdenton4 1 year ago Congress has lots of power, it's a question of whether they do anything. Currently the Republicans are uniformity falling in line with the authoritarian executive orders, even those that abrogate well established congressional powers. 4 replies →
masfuerte 1 year ago It's not a final yes/no. A two-thirds majority in both chambers can overrule the presidential veto. For example:https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55510151 1 reply →
The president signs laws, for example...... This isn't hard.
Im not being facetious. That’s a good example. So in that case the president has a final yes/no, but no authority to rewrite.
So maybe congress has a kind of veto power here?
Congress has lots of power, it's a question of whether they do anything. Currently the Republicans are uniformity falling in line with the authoritarian executive orders, even those that abrogate well established congressional powers.
4 replies →
It's not a final yes/no. A two-thirds majority in both chambers can overrule the presidential veto. For example:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55510151
1 reply →
yes.