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Veto
Executive orders, which have the binding force of law upon federal agencies but do not require congressional approval. It is one of the executive powers.
Laws are created by the legislature. They are interpreted by the Judicial branch. And they are enforced by the Executive Branch, the people working for the President.
That would be the Executive Branch, whose head is the President.
A simple answer is that such is not one of the powers given to the President by the Constitution. A more complicated reason is that the Constitution establishes three more or less independent branches of government, each with a separate function, and a system of checks and balances to make sure that no one branch controls everything. Congress and the President are separate branches. Congress makes the laws and the President carries them out.
This phrase means that the President is the chief executive office of the country, the boss of the country, so to speak. It means that he runs the government and carries out the laws passed by Congress. He is the one who has the power to spend the money appropriated by Congress and to collect the taxes imposed by Congress and so forth.
The best way to understand how Congress carries out its business is to think of it as a collection of different kinds of organizations.
Congress can legislate an act of war. But it is reserved to the military, itself, and its Commander-in-Chief (the President of the US) to determined when and how many troops will be deployed. Thus, Congress preserves its legislative role and the Executive branch carries out the intended legislation, in action. C
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The president acts as Chief Executive when he carries out federal law.
The Legislative Branch (Congress) passes laws. The Executive Branch (headed by the President) carries out those laws. If someone has entered the US illegally, the law states that they can be arrested and deported.
Executive branch