CRS Report for Congress

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Order Code 98-157 Updated April 7, 2004 CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web Summary Congressional Overrides of Presidential Vetoes Mitchel A. Sollenberger Analyst in American National Government Government and Finance Division The President s veto authority is among his most significant tools in legislative dealings with Congress. It is effective not only in preventing the passage of legislation undesirable to the President, but also as a threat, sometimes forcing Congress to modify legislation before it is presented to the President. Students of executive-legislative relations suggest that Congress s strength rests with passing statutes and the President s in vetoing them. Illustrative of this point is the fact that Presidents have vetoed 1,484 bills and Congress has overridden only 106 of them. President William Clinton vetoed 37 bills. Congress overrode two of these vetoes; one was pocket vetoed. President George W. Bush has not yet vetoed a bill. As a veto threat is carried out, Congress is faced with choices: letting the veto stand, achieving the difficult task of overriding the veto, meeting the President s objections and sending a new bill forward, or resubmitting the same provisions under a new bill number. 1 In the case of vetoed appropriations bills, the result can be the closure of federal agencies and the furlough of hundreds of thousands of federal employees, with the inevitable disruption of federal programs and services. See CRS Report RS21750, The Presidential Veto and Congressional Procedure; CRS Report 98-148, Presidential Vetoes, 1789-Present: A Summary Overview; and CRS Report 98-147, President Clinton s Vetoes. All veto reports are updated regularly. Background Historically, the veto power granted the President in the Constitution has proven to be an effective tool for the chief executive in his dealings with Congress. Article I, Section 7, of the Constitution provides, in effect, that a President needs the vote of only 1 For example, H.R. 1854 was vetoed October 3, 1995; see Legislative Branch Appropriations Act, 1996 Veto Message from the President of the United States (H.Doc. 104-122), in Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 141, Oct. 6, 1995, pp. H 9741-9742. H.R. 2492, the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act, 1996, identical to H.R. 1854, passed the House October 31, passed the Senate November 2, and was signed into law on November 19 (P.L. 104-53). Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress

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CRS-2 one more than one-third in either the House of Representatives or the Senate to sustain a veto. Congressional procedure and tradition, not the Constitution, have determined that a vote of two-thirds of either or both houses of Congress means a vote of two-thirds of those Members present and voting (provided there is a quorum) and not, as is the practice in some states, two-thirds of those elected. The Constitution states that, when the President vetoes a bill, he shall return it with his objections to the House in which it shall have originated. This type of veto is referred to as a regular or return veto. The returned veto then becomes a question of high privilege ; in other words, it takes precedence over other pending business before Congress. Neither house, however, is under any legal, constitutional, or procedural obligation to schedule an override vote attempt, although it may do so anytime during a Congress. It is not unusual for Congress to make no effort to override a President s veto if party leaders feel they do not have sufficient votes. In still other cases, vetoes have been challenged and sustained in one house, eliminating the need for a vote in the other chamber. Although a measure may have passed originally by a large majority vote in both houses, a two-thirds majority of those present in each chamber is required to override the President s veto. Prior to 1969, Congress overrode approximately 1 of every 18 (5.7%) regular vetoes. Since 1969, Congress has been more successful, overriding about 1 out of every 5 (18.3%) regular vetoes. See Table 1.

CRS-3 Table 1. Vetoes Overridden, 1789-Present President Regular Veto Override President Regular Veto Override Washington 2 B. Harrison 19 1 Adams Cleveland Jefferson (2nd term) 42 5 Madison 5 McKinley 6 Monroe 1 T. Roosevelt 42 1 J. Q. Adams Taft 30 1 Jackson 5 Wilson 33 6 Van Buren Harding 5 W. H. Harrison Coolidge 20 4 Tyler 6 1 Hoover 21 3 Polk 2 F. D. Roosevelt 372 9 Taylor Truman 180 12 Fillmore Eisenhower 73 2 Pierce 9 5 Kennedy 12 Buchanan 4 L. B. Johnson 16 Lincoln 2 Nixon 26 7 A. Johnson 21 15 Ford 48 12 Grant 45 4 Carter 13 2 Hayes 12 1 Reagan 39 9 Garfield G. H. W. Bush 29 1 Arthur 4 1 Clinton 36 2 Cleveland (1st term) 304 2 G. W. Bush 0 0 Totals 1484 106 President Clinton s Vetoes Of the 37 vetoes exercised by President Clinton, all but one were regular vetoes, which were returned to Congress and subject to congressional override votes. Table 2 provides information about the Clinton vetoes.

CRS-4 Table 2. President Clinton s Vetoes Bill Number Date of Veto Title Override Attempt H.R. 1158 06/07/95 Second Supplemental Appropriations and Rescissions Act for No attempt. FY1995 S. 21 08/11/95 Bosnia and Herzegovina Self-Defense Act of 1995 No attempt. H.R. 1854 10/03/95 Legislative Branch Appropriations for FY1996 No attempt. H.R. 2586 11/13/95 Increase in the Statutory Debt Limit No attempt. H.J.Res. 115 11/14/95 Second Continuing Resolution for FY1996 No attempt. H.R. 2491 12/06/95 Budget Reconciliation No attempt. H.R. 1977 12/18/95 Interior Appropriations for FY1996 House sustained 01/04/96 by 239-177. H.R. 2099 12/18/95 Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development No attempt. Appropriations for FY1996 H.R. 2076 12/19/95 Commerce, Justice, and State Appropriations for FY1996 House sustained 01/03/96 by 240-159. H.R. 1058 12/19/95 Securities Litigation Reform Act House overrode 12/20/95 by 319-100. Senate overrode 12/22/95 by 68-30. Public Law 104-67. H.R. 1530 12/28/95 Defense Authorizations for FY1996 House sustained 01/03/96 by 240-156. H.R. 4 01/09/96 Welfare Reform Act No attempt. H.R. 1833 04/10/96 Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 1995 House overrode 09/19/96 by 285-137. Senate sustained 09/26/96 by 57-41. H.R. 1561 04/12/96 American Overseas Interest Act of 1996 House sustained 04/30/96 by 234-188. H.R. 956 05/02/96 Common Sense Product Liability Legal Reform Act of 1996 House sustained 05/09/96 by 258-163. H.R. 743 06/30/96 Teamwork for Employees and Managers Act of 1996 No attempt. H.R. 2909 10/02/96 Amends Silvio O. Conte National Fish and Wildlife Refuge Act No attempt. H.R. 1469 06/09/97 Flood Relief Bill No attempt. H.R. 1122 10/10/97 Partial Birth Abortion House overrode 07/23/98 by 296-132. Senate sustained 09/18/98 by 64-36. H.R. 2631 11/13/97 Disapproving Cancellations House overrode 02/05/98 by 347-69. Senate overrode 02/25/98 by 78-20. P.L. 105-159. S. 1502 05/20/98 D.C. Student Vouchers No attempt. H.R. 2709 06/23/98 Iran Sanctions bill No attempt. H.R. 2646 07/21/98 Education Savings Account No attempt. H.R. 4101 10/07/98 FY1999 Agriculture Appropriations No attempt. H.R. 1757 10/21/98 Foreign Affairs Reform No attempt. H.R. 2488 09/23/99 Tax Relief Bill No attempt. H.R. 2587 09/28/99 D.C. Appropriations, FY2000 No attempt. H.R. 2606 10/18/99 FY00 Foreign Operations Spending No attempt. H.R. 2670 10/26/99 Commerce, Justice, and State Appropriations, FY00 No attempt. H.R. 3064 11/03/99 District of Columbia Appropriations, FY2000 No attempt. S. 1287 04/25/00 Nuclear Waste Policy Amendments of 2000 Senate sustained 05/03/00 by 64-35. H.R. 4810 08/05/00 Marriage Tax Relief Bill House sustained 09/13/00 by 270-158.

CRS-5 Bill Number Date of Veto Title Override Attempt H.R. 8 08/31/00 Estate Tax Elimination Act House sustained 09/07/00 by 274-157. H.R. 4733 10/07/00 Energy and Water Development Appropriations House overrode 10/11/00 by 315-98. Senate referred veto to committee. H.R. 4516 10/30/00 Legislative Branch and Treasury Appropriations No attempt. H.R. 4392 11/04/00 Intelligence Reauthorization Bill No attempt. H.R. 2415 12/19/00 Consumer Bankruptcy Overhaul Act Pocket veto. References U.S. Congress, Secretary of the Senate, Presidential Vetoes, 1789-1988 (Washington: GP0, 1992), 595 pp. S. Pub. 102-12. U.S. Congress, Secretary of the Senate, Presidential Vetoes, 1989-1991 (Washington: GPO, 1992), 12 pp. S. Pub. 102-13. CRS Reports CRS Report RS21750. The Presidential Veto and Congressional Procedure, by Mitchel A. Sollenberger. CRS Report 98-148. Presidential Vetoes, 1789-Present: A Summary Overview, by Mitchel A. Sollenberger. CRS Report 98-147. President Clinton s Vetoes, by Mitchel A. Sollenberger.

Useful Links Congress by the Numbers CongressByTheNumbers.com Leadership of Congress CongressLeaders.com Congressional Schedule CongressSchedules.com Congress Seating Charts CongressSeating.com Terms and Sessions of Congress TermsofCongress.com Senate Classes: Terms of Service SenateClasses.com Congressional Glossary CongressionalGlossary.com You have 2 cows YouHave2Cows.com