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this means that the branch is being checked if it is too overpowering the other branches. if the judicial branch claims the law unconstitutional then the legislative law is being checked because they are the one who make the laws.
One famous example happened just before the US Civil War. The US Congress the legislative branch passed a bill called the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. The US president, the head of the executive branch signed the bill into law and as the executive branch does, it must enforce the law. Two branches of the Federal government used their powers to create this particular law. In 1857, the US Supreme Court, the judicial branch of the Federal government, exercised its power to check the other two branches by deciding the Act was unconstitutional. Here is an example of how two branches of government can be checked in balance by another one.
Power!
legislative and executive branches
The branches checked by the Legislative Branch are the Executive Branch and the Judicial Branch to make sure they are doing their job.
balance check
Checks and Balances.
Legislative and judical.
because he believed that the powers of the republican government should be separated among different branches or groups in the government because he felt that no single branch could control the entire government if its powers were separated balanced and checked. then no single branch could use the government for its own selfish purposes. the result would be a government that would promote the common welfare.
Executive, legislative and judicial.to maintain a balance of power between the executive, judicial and legislative branches of governmentThere are 3 branches in the United States government (Legislative, Executive and Judicial) because that is how the constitution set it up. The reasoning behind this is a separation of powers. The same people who write a suggested law (a bill) cannot make it a Law, or Judge the constitutionality of that law and vice verse, people who judge the law cannot write it, etc... There is also the concept of Checks and balances here as well. No one branch is supreme over the others, and generally the three branches stay out of each others business. The President cannot tell the Supreme Court how to rule, or tell the congress what law to write, and the Congress cannot tell the president how to execute the laws, etc...
Checks and balances is a term referring to the distribution of power between different branches of government; In the US these branches are the Judicial Branch, the Legislative Branch, and the Executive Branch. Each branch of the government has powers (checks and balances) that prevent the other two branches from having absolute power. The Legislative Branch creates the laws, the Executive Branch enforces these laws, and the Judicial Branch interprets and modifies these laws. Here are examples using the US government (although the term applies to systems of government other than the US as well) : 1) The Legislative Branch, composed of the house of representatives and the senate, may pass a bill. However the Executive Branch (the President) may veto that bill. 2) The President (Executive Branch) may declare war. However this declaration must be approved by a majority vote in the senate. 3) The Judicial Branch may interpret the laws and punish those who break them, but they themselves may not create laws.
THE 2 BRANCHES ARE THE EXUCUTIVE BRANCH AND JUDICIAL BRANCH TOO MAKE SURE THERE DOING THEIR JOB! === ===