Checks & balances
The process by which Congress checks the bureaucracy is called oversight. Through various means, such as hearings, investigations, and budgetary control, Congress exercises its authority to oversee and monitor the activities of the bureaucracy, ensuring accountability and compliance with laws and regulations.
The principle is called checks and balances
The president has the ability to check the power of the bureaucracy. He does this by vetoing bills that have made it through congress if he disagrees with them. This keeps congress from passing laws unchecked.
I think that it is a positive process because it keeps the checks and balances in order.
This deals with the system of Checks & Balances. The President can "check the authority of Congress" by rejecting a unconstitutional law proposed by Congress. this process is called veto.The President checks Congress when he vetoes a bill that the Congress has passed. Congress can check him if a 2/3 majority votes to override his veto.Also, the President can check Congress by using the media (the "bully pulpit") to set the agenda for Congress. Presidents also tend to have success with Congress proportional to their approval rating with the public. Thus, if a president has a high approval rating, it is likely that Congress will be willing to help him accomplish his goals.
According to the US Constitution, Congress has "the power of the purse". This means that Congress approves the budget submitted by the President. It's one of the checks and balances built into the Constitution to ensure that one branch doesn't hold too much power.
the congress can veto a law the president passed
The President checks Congress when he vetoes a bill
The veto.
The way that the bureaucray stands for under congress, judiciary, president.Added: There is no "technique." The checks and balances system, by which our overall federal government balances the way it functions, does not apply to the way that Federal Departments, Agencies and Military are administered or operated. In fact, the federal bureaucracy is operated much along the lines of private industry, with a Director (boss) at the top level who ultimately answers to the President and with varying levels of managers and supervisors, and employees under them. The vast majority of the federal government's so-called bureaucracies, are centered in the Executive Branch of Government.
The judicial branch decides if laws are legal and it's called Checks and Balances.
veto
One of the key principles in American Government are checks and balances. Checks and balances is a process that each branch of the government can check the actions of the others. The three branches of government are the Judicial, Legislative, and Executive branches. Basically what this process entails, is when Congress enacts a law, the president can veto the law that Congress passes. The Supreme Court has the power to decide the laws Congress and the president pass to be constitutional or unconstitutional. Finally, the president is the one to appoint the justices of the Supreme Court, with consent of the Senate. That is a basic overview of the Checks and Balances that take place in American Government. Now the question is, does the system always hold true?