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The Supreme Court has the ultimate say on whether something is constitutional or not.
A constitutional court would do this.
The Supreme court has the power to say whether or not laws are constitutional.
The Supreme Court of the United States is the highest court in our system and it has the final say as to the constitutionality of laws and violations of the Constitutioin.
The Judicial Branch has the final say on all laws. If a law is brought to them, they decide if it is constitutional or not.
The Judicial Branch has the final say on all laws. If a law is brought to them, they decide if it is constitutional or not.
The Judicial Branch has the final say on all laws. If a law is brought to them, they decide if it is constitutional or not.
Mainly, the executive branch is to enforce the laws established by the legislative branch, while the judicial branch has the final say on interpreting the law.
Yes .... Norway is a constitutional monarchy; so in theory King Harald could veto any law he disapproved of. (King Harald has no power to introduce new law: the King's power is restricted to veto). In practice: if King Harald vetoed a law which parliament wanted;- parliament would dismiss King Harald and choose a different monarch. So King Harald has 'the final say' technically; but in practice he has no power at all. Norway's laws are chosen and enacted by parliament. This is what happens in all constitutional monarchies.
Yes, he is considered a scholar of Constitutional Law. In the academic world, a "scholar" is not just someone who has studied a subject and received an advanced degree; it is someone with considerable expertise and knowledge of that subject. Barack Obama received his law degree from Harvard Law School, where he was not only the editor of the Law Review, but he worked directly with a well-known expert in constitutional law, Professor Lawrence Tribe. Mr. Obama was also an adjunct professor of constitutional law for twelve years, at the University of Chicago Law School (they wanted to hire him full-time, but he had by then decided on a career in politics). Some people who ask this question disagree with the president on certain issues, so they may feel he is not applying the law the way they would like him to. But the fact remains that Mr. Obama has a long and well-documented history of studying, writing about, teaching, and researching constitutional law, so it would be fair to say he is a constitutional scholar.
The Prime minister hold the highest political office. However - ultimately Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II has the final say on whether a law is approved or not.
The Board has the final say, whether public or private.