No, the Supreme Court is not a legislative body. The Executive and Legislative branches makes treaties and pass legislation; the Supreme Court has the right to evaluate the constitutionality of these actions if they are challenged by parties with standing.
The_Supreme_Court_has no constitutional power to do anything,_but_the_Congress_must_ratify,_or_approve,_the_president's_treaty.">The Supreme Court usually does nothing, but the Congress must ratify, or approve, the president's treaty.
The President can not declare war on another countries. The only limitation on the President's treaty power is his ability to get the 3/4 of the Senate to ratify his Treaty. A more interesting question is if the President and Senate create and ratify a Treaty that conflicts with the Constitution. The Supreme Court is the branch that would have to decide what takes precedent. An example would be where the Constitution has the Supreme Court as the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution yet the President and Senate approve a Treaty making the International Court the ultimate arbiter on international issues.
The Supreme Court checks the President by interpreting treaties.
Declared unconstitutional by the supreme court
The US Senate (Legislative Branch) has the power to approve or disapprove Supreme Court appointments.
The president nominates a candidate for the position of Supreme Court justice. However, the US Senate must ratify the nomination before that person is sworn-in. Therefore, it is the Senate that holds the power, but the president is a part of the process.
no
The President can not declare war on another countries. The only limitation on the President's treaty power is his ability to get the 3/4 of the Senate to ratify his Treaty. A more interesting question is if the President and Senate create and ratify a Treaty that conflicts with the Constitution. The Supreme Court is the branch that would have to decide what takes precedent. An example would be where the Constitution has the Supreme Court as the ultimate interpreter of the Constitution yet the President and Senate approve a Treaty making the International Court the ultimate arbiter on international issues.
Not exactly. The President nominates US Supreme Court justices, but the Senate must approve their appointment.
Congress has to approve the US Supreme Court nominees.
president
A.the President nominates Supreme Court justices B.the President can fire judges C.Congress can refuse to ratify court decisions D.the Senate must approve Supreme Court justices E.the Executive Branch and the states must enforce Supreme Court decisions when necessary