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Judicial Branch
By Congress, primarily in the Judiciary Act of 1789. The exception is the Supreme Court, which was established by the Constitution.
Executive, Legaslative, and Judicial
The Constitution established three branches of government for a check and balance system.
Article I established the legislative branch.
Things are crossed out because certain things in the constitution are now unconstitutional. For instance the area that speaks about slaves being 3/5ths of a person.
preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States
The provision that provides flexibility to the U.S.Constitution is Article 5, which established procedures for proposing and ratifying amendments to the Constitution. Article 3 established the Supreme Court and the power of judicial review. It does not grant the Court the power to interpret the Constitution. However, in the 1803 case Marbury vs. Madison the Supreme Court determined that it had the right to interpret the Constitution, thus lending flexibility to the Constitution. -- Contributed by Ray Kovach, Chicago, IL
The branches are legislative, executive, and judicial as established by the US Constitution.
Each of these branches has a distinct and essential role in the function of the government, and they were established in Articles 1 (legislative), 2 (executive) and 3 (judicial) of the U.S. Constitution.
It is Article III of the United States Constitution that established a Supreme Court to head the judicial branch. It also provides the national government the power to create lower federal courts.
It pledged allegiance to the English king but established a form of government by the will of the majority.