No. In the United States, the President is head of the Executive branch; the Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch. There is no such thing as "the judicial court."
The President is the head of the executive branch of the government.
The President is the head of the executive branch. The Chief Justice is the head of the judicial branch and the Speaker of the House is the head of the legislative branch.
The President can not exercise any judicial powers. He is the head of the Executive Branch of Government and not a member of the Judicial Branch.
In the constitutional system of the United States, the chief Executive (the head of the Executive Branch) appoints people to the open Federal judicial positions. In many state governments, however, all or some of the judicial positions are filled by popular vote.
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 government of the Philippines is a unitary government, that is known as the Republic of the Philippines. The president of the Philippines is both the head of state and the head of government. Like the united states, there is a legislative, executive, and judicial branch of government.
No. The President is head of the Executive Branch of government, which is responsible for enforcing laws (among other things). The Judicial Branch consists of the constitutional courts that interpret and apply laws and ensure their constitutionality. The Supreme Court of the United States is head of the Judicial Branch. The Legislative branch is organized under Congress, and is responsible for enacting laws.
The mayor is the executive of the local government.
There are three branches of govt (executive, judicial, and legislative) and three levels (federal, state, and local). A governor is the head of the executive branch for state level government, and the mayor is basically the head of the executive branch at the local level.
Both presidential and parliamentary systems are forms of democratic government where power is ultimately vested in the people. Both systems have a separation of powers between the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. Additionally, both systems have a head of government (president or prime minister) and a head of state (president or monarch). However, a key difference is that in a presidential system, the executive branch is separate from the legislative branch, while in a parliamentary system, the executive branch is part of the legislative branch.
executive- Sonny Perdue Legislative- im geussing the Senate Judicial- consists of courts