The US Constitution is important to the judicial branch of government because it states the rights and responsibilities provided to the citizens of the country. This creates a basis for the judicial system to base their legal rulings on when determining if a person is innocent or guilty of committing a criminal offense.
In a word: Huge.
The Supreme Court in the USA are charged with being 'guardians of the constitution', protecting what the Founding Fathers referred to as 'fundamental law'. This means that they must ensure all laws passed by Congress and all acts of Congress and the President comply with Constitutional guidelines.
As Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist No. 78, 'the interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of the courts'. The court is thereby charged with striking down laws or presidential acts deemed unconstitutional, such as the declaring of President Clinton's Line-item vetoes as unconstitutional in Clinton vs. City of New York (1998). This power is known as judicial review, and acts as a check on the other two branches of government.
The US Constitution is important to the judicial branch of government because it states the rights and responsibilities provided to the citizens of the country. This creates a basis for the judicial system to base their legal rulings on when determining if a person is innocent or guilty of committing a criminal offense.
The Judicial Branch of government
i believe it is the senator who does it please look it up somewhere else to make sure
Yes, it does.
It was "built" (established) in 1787, when the US constitution was ratified.
In the United States, the power for the Judicial Branch comes explicitly from the Constitution, where Article III spells out the powers of the Judicial Branch. The structure of the US Judicial Branch is solely at the discretion of the Legislature to define. The only mention in the Constitution is that there be ONE Supreme Court with other courts. How we currently organize the court system has been defined by legislation, not by any original document.
The Judicial Branch is defined and delineated by Article III of the Constitution (though the word "branch" never appears).
the judicial branch is your answer
That would be the Judicial Branch.
The judiciary branch of the US Government decides cases involving US law. The Federal Court involved in a case may determine if a law is Constitutional or not. The highest level of the US Judicial branch is the US Supreme Court.
Article Three of the United States Constitution outlines the judicial branch, one of the three branches of the U.S. government. The other two are the executive branch, and the legislative branch.
Article 3.