Legislative:
* Makes all the laws * Controls all the money; taxes, borrows, and sets the budget * Has sole power to declare war * Oversees investigates and makes the rules for the government and its officers * appoints the heads of the executive branch * Appoints judges * Ratifies treaties
Executive:
* Preserves protects and defends the Constitution * Faithfully executes the laws of the United States * Executes the instructions of Congress * May veto laws but the veto may be overridden by Congress * Executes the spending authorized by Congress * Executes the instructions of Congress when it declares war or makes rules for the military * Declares states of emergency and publishes regulations and executive orders * Appoints judges with the advice and consent of the Senate * Has the power to grant pardons for crimes against the United States
Judicial
* Determines which jurisdiction any given case falls under * Judges when a law is unconstitutional * Has the responsibility to administer Constitutional law and to apply it to constitutional disputes * Determines the disposition of prisoners * May legally compel testimony and the production of evidence as the law provides. * Judges and competently administers uniform policies via the appeals process, but gives discretion in individual cases to low-level judges. (The amount of discretion depends upon the standard of review, determined by the type of case in question.) * Oversees and administers members of the judiciary * Is subject to impeachment by Congress
um... i don't know but you can try reading in your textbook.
the power to set the jurisdiction
they can override legislation
both the Legislative and the Executive
To check the power of the Judicial and the Legislative Branches
i don't know the check
Judicial review is primarily a check on the Legislative Branch; however, it can also be used to nullify executive orders, so it is sometimes a check on the Executive Branch.
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.
The legislative branch checks the executive branch by giving it consent to all Presidential appointments. The President is therefore restrained from choosing an appointee with radical views. The legislative branch checks the judicial branch by passing laws that bind their decisions.
The Judicial branch has the ability to check the Legislative branch and the Executive branch by interpreting laws and actions and determining whether or not they violate or conform to the Constitution.
Both the Judicial and Legislative branch can check the Executive branch. The Judicial branch has the power of judicial review and can declare any act of the Executive branch to be unconstitutional and therefore void. The Legislative branch has a number of checks on the Exectuive branch. The President, the head of the Executive Branch, can appoint federal judges but the Senate must approve.
The legislative doesn't check the judicial branch.
The judicial branch has powers to interpret laws, or regulations or other actions of the executive branch, or to declare them unconstitutional. It serves as a "check" on the executive by having the power to interpret the law differently than the executive, and having that interpretation supercede the interpretation of the executive branch. In addition, the judicial branch resolves disputes between the executive branch and citizens or businesses, providing a "check" on any excesses of the executive branch.
The judicial branch has powers to interpret laws, or regulations or other actions of the executive branch, or to declare them unconstitutional. It serves as a "check" on the executive by having the power to interpret the law differently than the executive, and having that interpretation supercede the interpretation of the executive branch. In addition, the judicial branch resolves disputes between the executive branch and citizens or businesses, providing a "check" on any excesses of the executive branch.