No. Congress is part of the Legislative branch. The Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch.
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 United States Supreme Court.
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 Supreme Court is not in the Congress. The Supreme court is at the top of the judicial branch of government, a co-equal branch with Congess.
Congress has to approve the US Supreme Court nominees.
Yes and no. Article III of the Constitution mandated the creation of the US Supreme Court, but Congress actually established the Court in the Judiciary Act of 1789.
Congress
The Judicial Branch of the US government consists of the Article III (constitutional) courts in the federal court system.The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial Branch, but all Article III courts are part of that branch.US District CourtsUS Court of International TradeUS Court of Appeals Circuit CourtsSupreme Court of the United StatesThe federal courts Congress created under their authority in Article I of the Constitution, such as US Bankruptcy Court, US Court of Federal Claims, US Tax Court, etc., are notconsidered part of the Judicial Branch, although they are part of the federal court system.
No, The US Supreme Court is the only federal court Congress is powerless to abolish, because the Court is mandated by Article III of the Constitution.
No, The US Supreme Court is the only federal court Congress is powerless to abolish, because the Court is mandated by Article III of the Constitution.
The supreme court is a part of the judicial branch.
Not the whole Congress. There are nominated by the President and approved by the US Senate.