Answer:10
Explanation:
The Constitution provides the President 10 days (excluding Sundays) to act on legislation or the legislation automatically becomes law. There are two types of vetoes: the “regular veto” and the “pocket veto.” The regular veto is a qualified negative veto.
The president has ten days (excluding Sundays) to sign a bill passed by Congress. A regular veto occurs when the President returns the legislation to the house in which it originated, usually with a message explaining the rationale for the veto.
Normally if a president does not sign a bill, it becomes law after ten days as if he had signed it. ... If Congress prevents the bill's return by adjourning during the 10-day period, and the president does not sign the bill, a "pocket veto" occurs and the bill does not become law.
The president can approve the bill and sign it into law or not approve (veto) a bill. If the president chooses to veto a bill, in most cases Congress can vote to override that veto and the bill becomes a law. But, if the president pocket vetoes a bill after Congress has adjourned, the veto cannot be overridden.
<span>The four spatial zones identified by the cultural anthropologist Edward Hall that can affect communication are intimate, personal, social and public. The intimate zone is within touching distance, the social zone four to twelve feet apart, the personal zone is two to four feet apart, with the public zone being more than twelve feet,</span>
The answer to this question will be B
Answer:
An advocacy campaign is a set of actions targeted to create support for a policy or proposal.
Examples of an advocacy campaign are:
Earth hours - This campaign was started in Australia to promote and protect the environment.
Sweetie - This campaign was directed to tackle the sexual exploitation problem and global child trafficking, through a computer-generated child called sweetie.