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Even though the argument is factually true, it is also true that Johnson was later impeached by congress given the poor job that he was overall as a president. That being said, there was only one other president who did a good job in office and furthered the progression of our nation where the veto override rate was above 50%. Other than that ONE presidency, no other veto overrides have been even close to half or over half. This shows the power of the president with bills becoming laws and how the president is more power than Congress in this field of government which is law making.
Even though Congress does have the power to impeach the president, VP, and all civil officers of the U.S., this a very unlikely thing to happen. For every president that has been in office, only 2 out of the 45 have been impeached. Even further, out of all of the federal officers under the president's staff, only 15 have ever been impeached. So even though the power is able to be used by Congress, it has not been used nor successful when used.
The President has the power to veto bills.
President has the power to veto bills from congress and they will be sent back to congress for further discussion of the bill. This will usually mean the longer the bill has to go through process of being passed, that the bill will die somewhere back in Congress
Even though congress has the power to use veto override to a bill vetoed by the president, it will take ⅔ of both house for this to be passed back so the president cannot veto again
For the entire time Obama was in office, out of the 147 bills that obama vetoed, only one bill was overridden against the president.
President has the power to veto bills from congress and they will be sent back to congress for further discussion of the bill.
Even though congress has the power to use veto override to a bill vetoed by the president, it will take ⅔ of both house for this to be passed back so the president cannot veto again.
For the entire time Obama was in office, out of the 147 bills that Obama vetoed, only one bill was overridden against the president.
This justifies the fact that the executive branch is more powerful than the legislative
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