slaugherkng
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Compare and contrast the two vetoes that the President of the United States can use to reject legislation.

Answer :

jennys4943

Compare:

In both scenarios, the president most likely disagrees with the bill.

Contrast:

Regular vetoes occur when the President refuses to sign a bill and returns the bill complete with objections to Congress within 10 days. Pocket vetoes occur when the President receives a bill but is unable to reject and return the bill to an adjourned Congress within the 10-day period.

The President has ten days to react on legislation before it becomes law, according to the Constitution.

The "normal veto" as well as the "pocket veto" are the two sorts of vetoes. The pocket veto is a one-of-a-kind veto that can then be overruled.

Regular vetoes happen when the President fails to submit a law and sends it back to Congress inside 10 days, replete with complaints.

Whenever the President gets a bill while being unable to reject as well as return it to a dissolved Congress within the 10-day limit, he is said to have used a pocket veto.

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