"What?" indeed!
If the Supreme Court rules it unconstitutional, that ends it. The only ones who can overturn that are some future Supreme Court.
checks and balances
The constitutional principle that best describes the given process is called Checks and Balances. It allows for each branch to limit the power of the others in order to prevent corruption or extremism.
was the president who appealed to the common people 1829
No the Congress can not nullify a ruling of the Supreme Court. The Congress would have to rewrite the law which the Supreme Court had declared unconstitutional. Then the new law could overrule the Supreme Court IF the new law was declared constitutional if/when appealed.
The principals that were included in most state constitutions are the people's rights. The state's include what the residents and people living in the state are entitled to as far as their rights.
No, President Benjamin Harrison lacked authority to veto the Louisiana Separate Car Act of 1890 (Act 111) because it was a Louisiana State law. The President can only veto acts of Congress (federal law).The only way the federal government could intervene was if someone appealed the law as unconstitutional before the US Supreme Court, which is what occurred in Plessy v. Ferguson, (1896). Unfortunately, the Court held the law was constitutional.
No. Only the President of the United States can do this. However, when a law is enacted, and then challenged in the court system, it may be appealed all the way up to the Supreme Court where it may then be ruled unconstitutional.
President Nixon appealed to a silent majority in the face of anti-war protests across America.
The Judicial Branch can declare an Executive Order (a Presidential Order) unconstitutional if it is presented to the court as part of a case or controversy.While the US Supreme Court is the final arbiter of constitutionality, even US District Courts can overturn an Executive Order, as was the case with President Obama's moratorium on deep water drilling in the Gulf. The lower court's decision may be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, but in this instance it wasn't.
Bill Clinton
The Judicial Branch can declare a Presidential Order (called an Executive Order) unconstitutional. While the US Supreme Court is the final arbiter of constitutionality, even US District Courts can overturn an Executive Order, as was the case with President Obama's moratorium on deep water drilling in the Gulf. The lower court's decision may be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court, but in this instance it wasn't.
Judicial review allows a court to evaluate laws, policies and presidential executive orders that are relevant to a case being heard by that court and determine if they are constitutional. The courts may nullify (overturn) any of these and render them unenforceable if they're found to be repugnant to the Constitution. It is important to note that any act of the President or Congress found unconstitutional in a lower court will almost certainly be appealed to the US Supreme Court for a final decision.