The eight Associate Justices and Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court are in the Judicial Branch.
If your question pertains to the United States government, then the judicial branch is comprised of all Supreme Court Justices(currently 9, one Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices). Technically, there are many more individuals employed by the federal government in jobs related to this branch.
Supreme Justices are nominated by the Senate.Then, the President appoints the justices. Therefore,the executive branch appoints supreme court justices
I assume you're asking about the branch of government, Executive, Legislative, or Judicial. The Judicial is the supreme court, with nine justices (the words judicial and justice come from the same root, see).
The United States Supreme Court consists of nine justices. The justices are appointed by the president and remain justices for life. The Supreme Court is part of the judicial branch of the U.S. government.
For the federal government the officeholders would be the Supreme Court justices.
The Justices of the US Supreme Court have lifetime appointments.
which branch has the power to make treaties with the senate's approval
The Supreme Court is made of 9 justices and is part of the judicial branch.
Samuel Alito is an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, which is head of the Judicial branch of government.
The Judicial Branch of the government decides whether or not the laws created by the Legislative Branch are constitutional. This branch consists of the Supreme Court and all the lower federal courts. Supreme Court justices are appointed by the President and confirmed by Congress.
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.
As an associate justice on the United States Supreme Court, he served in the judicial branch.