no
Not exactly. The President nominates US Supreme Court justices, but the Senate must approve their appointment.
president
No, the President cannot legally ignore the decisions of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is the highest court in the United States and its decisions are binding on all branches of government, including the executive branch led by the President.
A.the President nominates Supreme Court justices B.the President can fire judges C.Congress can refuse to ratify court decisions D.the Senate must approve Supreme Court justices E.the Executive Branch and the states must enforce Supreme Court decisions when necessary
The Supreme Court Justices are appointed by The President & confirmed by The Senate.
No, the Senate must confirm the President's appointments.
The president does not have any power over the decisions of the Supreme Court. Only the Supreme Court itself can overturn a supreme court decision.
They didn't approve.
Senate. The Senate must give a majority vote to approve a Supreme Court nominee.
Appointments to the US Supreme Court must be approved by the US Senate.
The President of the United States nominates judges for the Supreme Court "by and with the advice and consent of the Senate" (Article 2 of the Constitution).
The_Supreme_Court_has no constitutional power to do anything,_but_the_Congress_must_ratify,_or_approve,_the_president's_treaty.">The Supreme Court usually does nothing, but the Congress must ratify, or approve, the president's treaty.