US federal judges serve for life.
The judicial branch of the Federal Government includes the U.S. Supreme Court.
Assuming you're referring to the branches of government in the U.S.A., there are three of them. The Executive Branch includes the Office of the President and an enormous array of federal agencies such as the Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Homeland Security, and many, many more. These federal agencies all answer (at least theoretically) to the Office of President, and collectively they are considered all part of the Executive Branch. The Legislative Branch includes the the Senate and the House of Representatives. There are a small number of agencies that are also part of the Legislative Branch, such as the Government Accountability Office, which, though it is a government agency, answers to the House of Representatives rather than the Office of the President. The Judicial Branch includes the Supreme Court and the Federal Court System, which includes federal judges and their support staff.
The Judicial Branch The United States has a dual court system, so the judicial power is shared between the state and federal court system.
No. The constitution forbids any person from holding office in more than one branch of government (legislative/judicial/executive) at any given time. Federal judges are part of the judicial branch, while the senate is part of the executive branch.
Judicial branch Supreme court
The Government Printing Office, stylized today as GPO, is a division of the Legislative branch of the United States government. It services multiple branches, from the judicial to the executive, and currently maintains the Federal Digital System which provides government information to the general public free of charge.
One branch is the legislative branch. This is the law-making branch, which includes Congress and the Senate. The second branch is the executive branch. This is the branch that the President is under. He runs the country is the general of the US military. The final branch is the judicial branch. This branch is basically the Supreme Court.
Neither the Judicial nor Legislative Branch (Congress) has term limits. The difference is, Senators and Congressmen may be voted out of office, but members of the Judicial Branch can only be involuntarily removed from the bench if they are impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by the Senate.
The overall 'boss' of a state prosecutor is the State's Attorney General. The prosecutors office is part of the Executive Branch of government - not the Judicial Branch.
The branch of federal government the postal service is under is the Executive Branch. A post office was first created in 1792 made by Benjamin Franklin.
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.
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.