When the US Constitution was enacted, it contained a provision where the President can veto legislation which can only be overridden by a 2/3 super-majority of Congress.
But what if the founders decided against giving the President veto power or decided to water it down for various reasons (didn't want one man to override the "will of the people", wanted the POTUS to be less powerful, etc etc).
One possibility might be for the veto to only be temporary so that it acts more or less the same way as a "suspension veto" in other countries (where a bill can be delayed but not blocked completely absent a super-majority).
Another possibility is to remove the veto altogether.
Would the removal of or weakening of the Presidential veto have a profound effect on American politics by making Congress legislatively "supreme"? Would it make US politics more "parliamentary-like"? Or would it have little effect?