Well, those "powers" are branches of the government in America. Each branch has the power to perform checks and balances on the other branches. The judicial branch has the power to declare laws made by the executive branch (the president) and the legislative branch (congress) unconstitutional. But in turn the legislative and executive branches both have their own checks to use against the judicial branch.
The President can approve legislative measures passed by the House of Representative and the Senate. The President's powers pertaining to the judicial branch is that he/she may nominate a judge to the Supreme Court.
The legislative branch and the judicial branch share the power of making policy. Congress makes laws and the Court interprets them and advances additional aspects of law called precedents.
judicial is the court system
legislative is congress
and executive is the president
has different powers then others this is temporary answer
The United States Government is divided into three branches, Executive, Legislative, and Judicial.
There is, an Executive, Legislative and Judicial branch.
Judicial Power, Executive Power, and Legislative Power
executive, legislative, and judicial.
The three branches of government, Judicial, Legislative, and Executive.
To check the power of the Judicial and the Legislative Branches
The division of governmental power into the legislative executive and judicial branches reflects a separation of powers.
The executive check over the legislative branch is the power of vetoing laws. The executive check over the judicial branch is the power of judicial appointment -- the president can pick a judge to take the seat of a judge who leaves the supreme court.
Legislative is the most powerful of the three as it is the Law making body..
judicial, executive, and legislative. hope this helps!
Yes, they do.
The power of the executive branch is enforce the laws,the power of the legislative branch is to make laws, and the power of the judicial branch is to interpret the laws