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National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill...

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National Government Vocabulary
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Page 1: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

National Government Vocabulary

Page 2: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress.

Does you mom or dad ever veto something you want to do?

Page 3: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Bill• : an idea that might get turned into a law

I’m Just a Bill

Page 4: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Checks and BalancesA system that was built so that no one branch of our government could become too powerful.

Three Ring Circus

Page 5: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Executive Branch: The job of the executive branch is to carry out the laws of a country. The president

heads up this branch. The president can pass or veto a bill.

The Executive Branch

Page 6: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Judicial Branch: The Supreme Court heads the judicial branch of the United States government. The justices who make up the

Supreme Court are responsible for explaining and interpreting the Constitution.

Page 7: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Legislative Branch: The Legislative Branch is also called the Congress. There are two parts that make up Congress: the House of Representatives and the Senate. They write and

votes on laws.

Page 8: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

Senate: part of Congress. Each state elects two Senators to represent their state. They serve 6 years each.

The Senate

The Senate has 100 members. Each state has two Senators.

Senators are elected every 6 years. To become a Senator a person must be at least 30 years old, have been a US citizen for at least 9 years, and must live in the state they represent.

Page 9: National Government Vocabulary. Veto: To not allow or approve a law. The president may veto a bill sent to him by Congress. Does you mom or dad ever veto.

House of Representatives: part of Congress. States with large populations have more representatives than small states. Each representative serves for 2 years and represents a

certain area of their state.

Congress has two parts: the U.S. Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives. Each state has two U.S. Senators and at least one U.S. Representative; the more residents a state has, the more U.S. Representatives it is allowed. There are 100 U.S. Senators and 435 U.S. Representatives.


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