What is a Veto?

A veto in a democracy is a formal power that allows a person or institution to reject a decision, block a law, or stop an action even if a majority supports it.

Here’s the clearest breakdown:

1. What a veto means

A veto (Latin for “I forbid”) is the ability to say “No, this cannot go forward.”

2. Who usually has veto power

Different democracies give veto power to different actors:

✔ Presidents or Prime Ministers

In many countries, the head of state can veto a bill passed by parliament or congress.

✔ Upper houses of parliament

Some bicameral systems let an upper chamber block a law temporarily or permanently.

✔ Courts

Constitutional courts can “veto” (strike down) laws that violate the constitution.

✔ Governors or mayors

In federal systems like the U.S., state governors or city mayors can veto laws passed locally.

3. Purpose of a veto

A veto exists to prevent the majority from making rash or harmful decisions.
It creates checks and balances to protect:

  • minority rights
  • constitutional rules
  • long-term stability
  • separation of powers

4. Can a veto be overridden?

Often yes.
In many democracies, the legislature can override the veto if enough members agree (e.g., a supermajority such as two-thirds).

This ensures that the veto is powerful, but not absolute.

John Connor

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