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The judiciary.

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The Judicial Branch. Any court, but particularly the US Supreme Court, can review laws relevant to cases being tried or appealed before that court to ensure their constitutionality, but they don't scrutinize them for "fairness," as most people would define the concept.

Many laws are unfair to certain people or groups, but the judicial system is only concerned with whether a law is faithful to constitutional principles.

In order to overturn an "unfair" law, someone first has to convince the Court that the law directly violates a real person's (or people's) constitutional rights and causes harm to that person (or people).

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Jadyn Sporer

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2y ago
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13y ago

The judiciary.

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The Judicial Branch. Any court, but particularly the US Supreme Court, can review laws relevant to cases being tried or appealed before that court to ensure their constitutionality, but they don't scrutinize them for "fairness," as most people would define the concept.

Many laws are unfair to certain people or groups, but the judicial system is only concerned with whether a law is faithful to constitutional principles.

In order to overturn an "unfair" law, someone first has to convince the Court that the law directly violates a real person's (or people's) constitutional rights and causes harm to that person (or people).

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Q: What part of government interprets laws and sees that they are applied fairly?
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