Checks and Balance.
The branches of government check up on each other.
Yes, open your local newspaper or turn on the TV everyday since Trump was elected there has been a news story about checking the executive branch.
judicial
Assuming this is the United States Government...Every branch of the government is supposed to equal. The government is devised to be a system of checks and balances...Meaning that if one branch tries to do something let's say unethical another branch of the government will have process check the situation and restore balance to the system.
veto
yes they do....for example the executive branch can check the other two..and i can check out your mom....See how it works
It is called the Checks and Balances system.
One way the judicial branch checks the legislative branch is through the power of judicial review, which allows courts to evaluate the constitutionality of laws passed by Congress. If a law is found to conflict with the Constitution, the judicial branch can invalidate it, ensuring that legislative actions adhere to constitutional principles. This serves as a critical check on legislative power, maintaining the balance of authority among the branches of government.
the way that branches check each other is called the checks and ballances system.
There is a direct relationship between the executive, legislature and the judiciary. This is what forms the government with the legislature making laws, the executive implementing the laws and the judiciary interpreting the law.
Approve Presidentail nominations
The United States and a number of other countries have three separate official branches of government, the legislative, the executive, and the judicial. Each branch takes care of certain legal functions as well as providing a check on the other two. Sometimes the Press is called the fourth branch of government. It has no official governmental function but it frequently ferrets out corruption within the government which the other branches ignored but should not have. So it does the same work as a branch of government.