No. The US Federal government has three branches: The Executive branch, the Legislative branch, and the Judicial branch. The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch.
There are also three basic levels within the Judicial branch:
Decisions by all three branches of government can be appealed to the US Supreme Court.
The the United States Constitution made the supreme court. The supreme court was made in 1789.
Congress, the President and the US Supreme Court are the leaders of the three branches of the US Government: Congress = Legislative Branch President = Executive Branch Supreme Court = Judicial Branch
The three branches of law are the Legislative, the Executive, and the Judicial. In the US, these are the Congress, the President (and his cabinet) and the courts, including the US Supreme Court.
None. The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial Branch of government; it does not have branches of its own. If you're asking how many Circuits (US Court of Appeals Circuit Courts) are below the Supreme Court, the answer is thirteen.
This question is answered as if it asked if the US Supreme Court was part of the US president's cabinet. The answer is no. The US government has three distinct branches, the Congress, the Supreme Court and the Executive branch. The US president heads the executive branch.
The Supreme Court is NOT the president's overseer. There are checks and balances in place, but the three branches are independent.
The US government is divided into three branches: Executive - The president Legislative - Congress Judicial - Supreme Court
By the Supreme court
The three branches ofgovernment areLegislative, Executive, and Judicioul
If you are speaking of the three barnches of the US government, then they are Executive (President), Legislative (House and Senate), and Judicial (Supreme Court).
No. The Supreme Court has no part in creating or approving the federal budget; this is a task shared by the Executive and Legislative branches of the US government.