A、Why the president opposes a bill. B、How the president wants to revise a bill. C、Why a deadline has not been met. D、When lawmak

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问题  
We know then that in the US, it’s the job of Congress to review proposed new laws, which we call bills, and perhaps to modify these bills and then wrote on them. But even if the bill passed in Congress, it still doesn’t become a law until the president had a chance to review it, too. And if it’s not to the president’s liking, the bill can be vetoed or killed in either of two ways. One is by a veto message. The president has ten days to veto the bill by returning it to Congress, along with the message explaining why it’s being rejected. This keeps the bill from becoming a law unless overwhelming majorities of both Houses of Congress vote to over-right the president’s veto. Something they really do. Often, lawmakers simply revised the vetoed bill and passed it again. This time, in the form the president less likely to object to, and thus less likely to want to veto. The other way the president can kill a bill is by pocket veto. Here’s what happens. If the president doesn’t sign the bill within ten days, and Congress are jurors during that time, then the bill will not become law. Notice that is only the end of entire session of Congress that the pocket veto can be used, not just whenever Congress take the shorter break, say, for a summer vacation. After a pocket veto, that particular bill is dead. If a lawmaker in Congress wants to push the matter in their next session, they’ll have to start all over with a brand new version of the bill.
23. What is the main topic of the talk?
24. What does a veto message explain?
25. What do lawmakers often do after a veto message is issued?
26. What happens to a bill as the result of a pocket veto?

选项 A、Why the president opposes a bill.
B、How the president wants to revise a bill.
C、Why a deadline has not been met.
D、When lawmakers plan to end their session.

答案A

解析
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