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.
No. The US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch of government; the President and his (or her) Cabinet are part of the Executive branch of government. They are separate and independent of each other.
The Senate
The Executive Branch is made up of the President, Vice President, Presidential Administrative Staff, Cabinet, and military. The Legislative Branch is made up of the House of Representatives and the Senate. The Judicial Branch is made up of the Supreme Court.
The Executive Branch is made up of the President, Vice President, Presidential Administrative Staff, Cabinet, and military. The Legislative Branch is made up of the House of Representatives and the Senate. The Judicial Branch is made up of the Supreme Court.
Yes, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch.
Yes, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch.
No, the Supreme Court is part of the Judicial Branch. Congress is part of the legislative branch.
The supreme court is a part of the judicial branch.
No. Congress is part of the Legislative branch. The Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch.
Judicial
The Supreme Court of Illinois is part of the Judicial Branch of the Illinois State government.
Yes, but only if the action or Executive Order is part of a case to which the Supreme Court has granted certiorari (appellate jurisdiction) or is hearing under original jurisdiction (far less likely). The Court does not have the authority to be proactive in declaring legislation or executive decisions unconstitutional.