by common law
The process of judicial review was established through the landmark case of Marbury v. Madison in 1803. The Supreme Court declared that it had the authority to interpret the Constitution and determine the constitutionality of laws and government actions. This established the principle that courts have the power to review and strike down legislation or executive actions that conflict with the Constitution.
Mainly, the executive branch is to enforce the laws established by the legislative branch, while the judicial branch has the final say on interpreting the law.
true
The branches are legislative, executive, and judicial as established by the US Constitution.
ensure legislative and executive equality
Three, the Executive, Legislative and the Judicial.
none
judicial, legislative, executive, and that's about all of them i think....
judges if laws and acts of the legislative and executive branches are constitutional
the executive branch carries out laws/ enforces laws, while the judicial branch determines if laws are constitutional, the legislative branch makes laws
central legislative and central executive
The 3 branches of the U.S. government are legislative,executive,and judicial as established by the U.S. constitution.
-Executive(President) -Legislative(Congress) -Judicial(Decides whether laws are constitutional or not)