No, Congress is part of the Legislative branch.
No, it is a part of the legislative branch.
The executive branch is part of our Congress.
That question is not true. Congress is part of the legislative branch.
The President is part of the executive branch, and Congress is part of the legislative branch. Courts, such as the Supreme Court, are part of the judicial branch.
They are both part of the U.S. government. The president is head of the executive branch while Congress makes up the legislative branch.
No, he is part of the Executive branch. Congress is the Legislative branch, and the Supreme Court is the Judicial branch.
Congress is actually not part of the executive branch of government. The executive branch is responsible for enforcing laws and is headed by the President of the United States. Congress, on the other hand, is an independent branch of government that is responsible for making laws and is made up of two chambers - the House of Representatives and the Senate.
The three branches are legislative executive and judicial. The house of representatives and the senate is part of the congress and the con gress is part of the legislative branch. The president and the vice president are part of the executive branch. The supreme court is part of the judicial branch.
Congress is part of the Legislative branch of government.
Legislative branch Legislative branch = Congress Judicial branch = courts Executive branch = President and cabinet
Congress is not an example of the executive branch. Congress is the legislative branch, in place to make and pass laws, while the executive branch includes the President and the bureaucracy he oversees.
The head of the executive branch can veto laws passed by congress. The head of the executive branch is the president.
Legislative branch Legislative branch = Congress Judicial branch = courts Executive branch = President and cabinet