4.
The
Supreme Court of the United States is the highest federal court of the United
States. Established pursuant to Article III of the United States Constitution
in 1789,
The
Supreme Court has a special role to play in the United States system of
government. The Constitution gives it the power to check, if necessary, the
actions of the President and Congress.
It
can tell a President that his actions are not allowed by the Constitution. It
can tell Congress that a law it passed violated the U.S. Constitution and is,
therefore, no longer a law.
It can also tell the government of a state
that one of its laws breaks a rule in the Constitution.
The
Supreme Court is the final judge in all cases involving laws of Congress, and
the highest law of all — the Constitution.
The
Supreme Court, however, is far from all-powerful. Its power is limited by the
other two branches of government. The President nominates justices to the
court.
The
Senate must vote its approval of the nominations. The whole Congress also has
great power over the lower courts in the federal system. District and appeals
courts are created by acts of Congress. These courts may be abolished if
Congress wishes it.
The
Supreme Court is like a referee on a football field. The Congress, the
President, the state police, and other government officials are the players.
Some can pass laws, and others can enforce laws.
But
all exercise power within certain boundaries. These boundaries are set by the
Constitution. As the "referee" in the U.S. system of government, it
is the Supreme Court's job to say when government officials step out-of-bounds.
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