Some checks and balances the Executive branch has on the other branches are: Over the Legislative branch: The President must approve of legislation the Legislative Branch has passed before that legislation becomes effective. If the President vetoes that legislation, the Legislative Branch may still pass the legislation, but it now must be by a majority of 2/3 of each house of Congress, instead of the usual simple majority. Another is that while Congress passes the laws, it is the Executive Branch that carries them out. Without the Executive branch's co-operation, the actions of the Legislative branch might not have any effect. Over the Judicial Branch: The President is the one who chooses the people who are to be the judges and justices of the Judicial Branch. In addition, the Executive Branch through its police power is the branch which enforces the judgments of the Judicial branch. Again, without the co-operation of the Executive Branch, the actions of the Judicial Branch might have no effect.
Here are several of the major checks and balances between the three branches of the US government:
The "advise and consent" power of Congress over appointments both to the Executive and Judicial branches provide a powerful check on the power of those branches by the Legislative branch.
The appointment power of the Executive for Judicial seats provides it with power over the Judicial branch.
The Judicial branch's power to invalidate laws (as passed by Congress) or actions (as performed by the Executive) give is a check on the power of both of those branches.
The Executive's legislative veto power is a check on Congress's law-making power.
Congress' ability to fund (or de-fund) certain areas of the federal government provide it with a very powerful check against actions taken by the Executive, and as a limit on the Judicial branch (though, in practice, Congress is very reluctant to use this lever on the Judiciary, as it generally is viewed as overstepping its prerogatives).
Checks and Balances allow Congress, the Executive branch (President) and the Judicial branch to oversee one another's actions keeping one another in check, and not allowing any one branch to have too much power. For the Executive branch they then focus on making sure Judicial and Congressional actions are not overreaching which is where the power to veto may come into play.
One is the impeachment process. The House has the exclusive power to impeach a president, and then the Senate tries the president. Another is the over-ride of a presidential veto.
Checks and Balances.... Look it up.
Checks and Balances.
Legislative branch can veto the executive branch vetoes and can impeach.
Each branch of government checks each other in the system of checks and balances. This includes the legislative branch, along with the the executive and judicial. The branches basically check each other to make sure no branch is abusing their powers.
The Legislative Branch shows an example of check and balance by overiding the President's vote (Executive Branch)
Yes. Checks and balances are a form of government to keep each branch in order and to not give one branch too much power. For example the legislative branch can veto the executive branch or the executive branch can declare something unconstitutional.
Under checks and balances system of constitution, executive branch "checks" legislative branch through veto power. Executive branch "checks" judicial branch through appointment power (appointing judges/justices).
Don't they use checks and balances? That's my answer.
The system of checks and balances. The Legislative Branch can write legislation. The Executive Branch can veto laws passed by the Legislative Branch. The Legislative Branch can override the veto. The Judicial Branch can rule on the constitutionality of laws. The Executive Branch appoints important judges. The appointments have to be approved by the Legislative Branch.
The legislative branch controls the appropriations of money, they are checking the executive branch(if you know about checks and balances)
Checks and balances is where the Legislature, Executive, and Judicial branch look over each other and make sure no one branch gets too powerful. If the Judicial branch doesn't like something that the Executive branch likes, they can veto it.
The Legislative branch and the Judicial branch.