How can the powers of the branches expand or change over time
In an absolute monarchy the king has power over all branches
The powers of the judicial branch are contained in Article III of the Constitution, but those powers are not over the executive branch...they are separate from the powers of the legislative and executive branches.
No it does not, that is why there is a separation of powers this makes a balance and doesn't allow one to have more power than the other.
The United States goverment want to expand their powers overseas because they didn't have gunpower over seas they only had it on seas.
Neither branch answers to the President. The purpose of the separation of powers was to insure that no one of the three branches had complete control over the other two. Each of the branches has some control over the others, but it is not total.
I would argue that the Legislative branch has at least two important powers over the judicial branch: 1) the ability to approve or reject presidential nominations for judicial office; 2) the power of impeachment over federal judges and justices.
To the principle of separation of powers the Constitution contains the system of checks and balances. Each branch of the government exercises some control over the other branches. The purpose is to prevent any one branch or person from becoming too powerful in the federal government. The system, while preventing the concentration of power, also creates a system of shared powers between the branches.
he started gaining new powers and getting stronger and strong
no, cuz there is a thing called the expansivity of a substance that tells us how much a particular substance will expand over 1 degree change in temprature
it is to give equal rights to each of the 3 branches of governmentwhile that is the basic form, this is strait from a dictionary:1 : the constitutional allocation of the legislative, executive, and judicial powers among the three branches of government2 : the doctrine under which the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government are not to infringe upon each other's constitutionally vested powersin other words:if one branch makes a law then the other branches have the power to either uphold that law or veto it. it basicly states that neither branch can gain and keep more power over the other branches.
Blending of powers means that they are mixed between two or more people or groups. In government, this means two or more departments work together and collaborate in the exercise of a certain power, function, or responsibility, rather than one department acting alone.
The separation of powers in the Constitution establishes three separate branches of government, the executive, judicial, and legislative. Each has their own special powers. Checks and balances allow each of the three branches to "check" the power of the other two branches to prevent any one branch from becoming too powerful. The president's powers are limited by the power of the other two branches. For example: the Court can rule an action by the president as unconstitutional and the Congress can over-ride a presidential veto.