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Bills Without a Signature
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A U.S. bill can become law after House and Senate passage when the enrolled bill reaches the president, the 10-day clock runs without a signed approval or returned veto, and Congress remains able to receive a return message.
- Frame 1Presentment gate: Congress turns a bill into federal law only after the enrolled document reaches the White House, starting the public deadline.
- Frame 2Choice diagram: the president can sign, return a veto, or let the 10-day clock keep running while Congress can receive objections.
- Frame 3Timeline rule: 10 days, Sundays excepted, converts silence into law unless adjournment blocks a return message.
- Frame 4Override path: two-thirds votes in both chambers route a vetoed bill through a vote board and back into law.
- Frame 5Failure mode: adjournment can create a pocket-veto stop, preventing return and leaving the unsigned document outside the law.
- Frame 6Watch ledger: receipt date, adjournment status, veto message and public-law publication reveal which path happened.
Verification record
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- wire-diagram-flowchart
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- generated · codex-imagegen
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- 3 live sources used and checked before publish
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- cross-checked sources
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- Visual treatment checked before publication
- Selected
- Jul 10, 8:09 PM EDT
- Published source time
- Pending