No. The United States Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch. See Article III of the US Constitution.
No, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch. Congress is part of the legislative branch.
No. Congress is part of the Legislative branch. The Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch.
No, he is part of the Executive branch. Congress is the Legislative branch, and the Supreme Court is the Judicial branch.
The President is part of the executive branch, and Congress is part of the legislative branch. Courts, such as the Supreme Court, are part of the judicial branch.
No. The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial Branch of government. The House of Representatives is part of the Legislative Branch of government. They function independently of each other.
The Senate and the House of Representatives are both part of the Legislative branch. The Legislative branch (Congress) creates and passes laws; the Judicial branch, headed by the US Supreme Court, evaluates challenged laws to ensure they are constitutional; the Executive branch enforces laws.
The Supreme Court is part of the judicial branch of the United States government. It is an independent organization that is separate from the executive and legislative branches. The Supreme Court is made up of nine justices who are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
No They form the legislative branch. The President is the executive branch and the Supreme Court makes up the judicial branch
Yes, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch.
Yes, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch.
The Chief Justice is a member of the US Supreme Court, which is part of the Judicial branch of government, not a part of the Legislative branch.
The president is part of the executive branch of government. The other two branches are the judicial and legislative, which are represented by Congress and the Supreme Court, respectively.