Order Code RS22188
Updated October 9, 2007
Regular Vetoes and Pocket Vetoes:
An Overview
Kevin R. Kosar
Analyst in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Summary
The veto power vested in the President by Article I, Section 7 of the Constitution
has proven to be an effective tool for the chief executive in his dealings with Congress.
Since the founding of the federal government in 1789, 36 of 43 Presidents have
exercised their veto authority a total of 2,554 times. Congress has overridden these
vetoes on 106 occasions (4.2%). Presidents have vetoed 81 appropriations bills, and
Congress has overridden 12 (14.8%) of these vetoes. This report will be updated at the
beginning of each new Congress.
Constitutional Basis and Importance
The U.S. Constitution (Article I, Section 7) provides that, for a bill to become law,
it must be approved by both houses of Congress and presented to the President for his
approval and signature.1 The President may sign a bill into law within the 10-day period
(excluding Sundays) provided in the Constitution,2 let it become law without his
signature, or veto it. The Constitution states that, when the President vetoes a bill, “he
shall return it, with his Objections to that House in which it shall have originated.” This
type of action is called a “regular” or “return” veto. If, on the other hand, Congress has
adjourned within the 10-day period after presentation of the bill to the President (thereby
preventing the return of the bill to Congress), the President may simply withhold his
signature, and the bill does not become law — a practice that has been dubbed a “pocket”
veto.3 The President’s veto authority is among his most significant tools in legislative
1 These bills include joint resolutions, but do not include proposed amendments to the
Constitution, which require a two-thirds vote in each house, and are sent directly to the states for
approval. U.S. Constitution, Art. V.
2 U.S. Constitution, Art. I, Sec. 7.
3 Beginning in 1929, several judicial decisions have attempted to clarify when an adjournment
(continued...)

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dealings with Congress. Illustrative of this point is the fact that Presidents have vetoed
2,554 bills since 1789; of these, Congress has overridden 106 (4.2%). Moreover, the veto
also can be effective as a threat, sometimes forcing Congress to modify legislation before
presenting it to the President.
This report presents information on how Congress can override regular vetoes, the
number of vetoes by each President, and the use of vetoes in relation to appropriations
bills. The report does not address two other types of vetoes — line-item vetoes (since the
President has no such power at present) and legislative vetoes (which are wielded by
Congress, not the President).4 It also does not address presidential signing statements.5
Overriding a Veto
If a bill is pocket vetoed while Congress is out of session, the only way for Congress
to override the veto is to reintroduce the legislation as a new bill, pass it through both
houses, and present it to the President again for his signature. On the other hand,
Congress may override a regular veto without introducing new legislation.
According to Article 1, Section 7 of the Constitution, when the President chooses not
to sign a bill and instead returns it to the chamber that originated it, the chamber enters
the message of the President detailing the reasons for the veto into its Journal and then
proceeds “to reconsider” the bill. Because the Constitution does not state exactly how
Congress should reconsider a vetoed bill, House and Senate procedures govern the
specific treatment of bills returned by the President.6
Passage by a two-thirds margin in both houses is required to override a veto before
the end of the Congress in which the veto is received. Although the Constitution states
that approval requires “two thirds of that House,” congressional procedure, tradition, and
judicial rulings have interpreted this requirement to mean two-thirds of those Members
present and voting, provided there is a quorum present. If a two-thirds vote is successful
in the originating house, that house informs the other of its decision to override the veto
by message. Neither house is under any constitutional, legal, or procedural obligation to
schedule an override vote. It is not unusual for Congress to make no effort to override the
veto if congressional leaders do not believe they have sufficient votes.
3 (...continued)
by Congress prevents the President from returning a veto. For information on these cases, see
CRS Report RL30909, The Pocket Veto: Its Current Status, by Louis Fisher.
4 On these types of vetoes, see CRS Report RL33635, Item Veto and Expanded Impoundment
Proposals: Legislative History and Current Status
, by Virginia McMurtry; CRS Report
RL33365, Line Item Veto: A Constitutional Analysis of Recent Proposals, by Morton Rosenberg;
and CRS Report RS22132, Legislative Vetoes After Chadha, by Louis Fisher.
5 CRS Report RL33667, Presidential Signing Statements: Constitutional and Institutional
Implications
, by T. J. Halstead.
6 For information on House and Senate procedures for considering vetoed bills, see CRS Report
RS22654, Veto Override Procedure in the House and Senate, by Elizabeth Rybicki.

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Vetoes Exercised and Overridden
Pocket Vetoes and Returned Vetoes
Table 1 shows that, since the beginning of the federal government in 1789, 36 of 437
Presidents have exercised their veto authority on a total of 2,554 occasions. Of that
number, 1,488 (58.3%) were regular vetoes — that is, the rejected legislation was returned
to the congressional house of origin, while it was in session, with a presidential message
of explanation — and 1,066 (41.7%) were pocket vetoes, or rejected while Congress was
adjourned.8 Congress has overridden 106 (7.1%) of the 1,488 regular vetoes. This
percentage, though, is skewed downward by the enormous number of vetoes in
administrations prior to the 87th Congress (which began in 1961).9 If one counts only the
normal vetoes since 1961 (the beginning of the Kennedy Administration), one finds 223
vetoes and 33 overridden (14.8%).
George W. Bush was the first President since John Quincy Adams (1825-1829) to
serve a full term without wielding his veto. No president since Thomas Jefferson (1801-
1809) has served two terms without vetoing a bill.
Table 1. Presidential Vetoes, 1789-2007
Coincident
Vetoes
President
Regular Vetoes
Pocket Vetoes
Total Vetoes
Congresses
Overridden
Washington
1st -4th
2

2

J. Adams
5th -6th




Jefferson
7th -10th




Madison
11th -14th
5
2
7



Monroe
15th -18th
1

1

J. Q. Adams
19th -20th




Jackson
21st -24th
5
7
12



Van Buren
25th -26th

1
1

W. H. Harrison
27th




Tyler
27th -28th
6
4
10
1
7 There have been 43 presidencies, but only 42 persons have served as President. Grover
Cleveland was elected to two presidencies.
8 President George H.W. Bush attempted to pocket veto two bills during intrasession recesses.
Congress considered the two bills enacted into law because the President had not returned the
legislation. These two disputed vetoes are not included in Table 1.
9 Most of those vetoes prior to 1960 were of private bills (i.e., legislation that would confer
benefits upon a single person or company) and were almost never overridden. In 1971, Congress
gave administrators more discretion to handle the claims of individuals. Thus, the need for
congressionally passed private bills has dropped dramatically — from hundreds per annum to a
few dozen — and, therefore, the opportunities for vetoes. On private bills, see CRS Report 98-
628, Private Bills: Procedure in the House, by Richard S. Beth.

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Coincident
Vetoes
President
Regular Vetoes
Pocket Vetoes
Total Vetoes
Congresses
Overridden
Polk
29th -30th
2
1
3



Taylor
31st




Fillmore
31st -32nd




Pierce
33rd -34th
9

9
5
Buchanan
35th -36th
4
3
7



Lincoln

37th-39th
2
5

7

A. Johnson
39th-40th 21
8
29
15
Grant
41st-44th 45
48
93
4
Hayes
45th-46th 12
1
13
1
Garfield
47th




Arthur
47th -48th
4
8
12
1
Cleveland
49th -50th 304
110
414
2
B. Harrison
51st -52nd 19
25
44
1
Cleveland
53rd -54th 42
128
170
5
McKinley

55th -57th
6
36

42

T. Roosevelt
57th -60th 42
40
82
1
Taft
61st -62nd 30
9
39
1
Wilson
63rd -66th 33
11
44
6
Harding
67th
5
1
6


Coolidge
68th -70th 20
30
50
4
Hoover
71st -72nd 21
16
37
3
F. D. Roosevelt
73rd -79th 372
263
635
9
Truman
79th -82nd
180
70
250
12
Eisenhower
83rd -86th 73
108
181
2
Kennedy
87th -88th 12
9
21


L. B. Johnson
88th -90th 16
14
30


Nixon
91st -93rd 26
17
43
7
Ford
93rd -94th 48
18
66
12
Carter
95th -96th 13
18
31
2
Reagan
97th -100th 39
39
78
9
G. H. W. Bush
101st -102nd 29
15
44
1
Clinton
103rd -106th 36
1
37
2
G. W. Bush
107th -110th
4

4

Total
1,488
1,066
2,554
106
Sources: U.S. Congress, Senate, Secretary of the Senate, Presidential Vetoes, 1789-1988, S.Pub. 102-12,
103rd Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1992); and U.S. Congress, Senate, Secretary of the Senate,
Presidential Vetoes, 1989-2000, S.Pub. 107-10, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2001).

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Vetoes of Appropriation Bills
A veto of an appropriations bill can result in the closure of federal agencies, the
furlough of federal employees, and the interruption of federal programs and services.10
Despite these high stakes, Presidents have vetoed 81 appropriations bills since 1789; more
than half of these vetoes have occurred since 1968.11 For example, Presidents Carter,
Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and Clinton were presented with a total of 387 annual
appropriations acts and vetoed 30 of them (7.8%).12 President George W. Bush has
vetoed one appropriations bill. Congressional overrides of vetoes of appropriations are
not unusual. For example, of the 81 vetoes, 12 (14.8%) have been overridden (see Table
2
).
Table 2. Appropriations Bills Vetoed, 1789-2007
Coincident
President
Approp. Acts Vetoed
Vetoes of Approp. Acts Overridden
Congresses
Washington
1st -4th


Adams
5th -6th


Jefferson
7th -10th


Madison
11th -14th


Monroe
15th -18th


J. Q. Adams
19th -20th


Jackson
21st -24th


Van Buren
25th -26th


W. H. Harrison
27th


Tyler
27th -28th
2



Polk
29th -30th
1



Taylor
31st


Fillmore
31st -32nd


Pierce
33rd -34th
4
2
Buchanan
35th -36th
1



Lincoln
37th-39th


A. Johnson
39th-40th


10 For additional information on federal government shutdowns, see CRS Report 98-844,
Shutdown of the Federal Government: Causes, Effects, and Process, by Kevin R. Kosar (out of
print; available from the author).
11 The data in this section and in Table 2 include annual appropriations acts (which provide
annual funding for the routine operations of most federal agencies), supplemental appropriations
acts, and continuing appropriations acts. Excluded are measures dealing with impoundments,
transfers, line-item vetoes under the Line Item Veto Act of 1996, and bills proposing
appropriations for the relief of private claims.
12 CRS Report RS20719, Vetoed Annual Appropriation Acts: Presidents Carter Through Clinton,
by Mitchell Sollenberger (out of print; available from Kevin R. Kosar).

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Coincident
President
Approp. Acts Vetoed
Vetoes of Approp. Acts Overridden
Congresses
Grant
41st-44th


Hayes
45th-46th
5



Garfield
47th


Arthur
47th-48th
1
1
Cleveland
49th -50th
1



B. Harrison
51st -52nd


Cleveland
53rd -54th
5
1
McKinley
55th -57th


T. Roosevelt
57th -60th


Taft
61st -62nd
4



Wilson
63rd -66th
8



Harding
67th
1



Coolidge
68th -70th


Hoover
71st -72nd
2



F. D. Roosevelt
73rd -79th
1
1
Truman
79th -82nd
1

1
Eisenhower
83rd -86th
3
1
Kennedy
87th -88th


L. B. Johnson
88th -90th


Nixon
91st -93rd
5
1
Ford
93rd -94th
5
3
Carter
95th -96th
2



Reagan
97th -100th
6
1
G. H. W. Bush
101st -102nd
8



Clinton
103rd -106th 14


G. W. Bush
107th -110th
1



Total
81
12
Sources: U.S. Congress, Senate, Secretary of the Senate, Presidential Vetoes, 1789-1988, S.Pub. 102-12,
103rd Cong., 2nd sess. (Washington: GPO, 1992); and U.S. Congress, Senate, Secretary of the Senate,
Presidential Vetoes, 1989-2000, S.Pub. 107-10, 107th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 2001).
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