Checks and Balances

2055 Words5 Pages

Checks and balances United States Constitution has specific system designed to prevent one of the three branches from gaining control or becoming powerful. Checks and Balances is the system that has been put on the effect due to many instances over the course of the year history. The designed system of Checks and Balances is very open yet complex. The president appointing powers can be limited through the judicial review if he is not fulfilling his responsibility as a leader. This is when a justice can declare a law unconstitutional. These are fundamental of government under which different branches are empowered to prevent actions by other branches and are formed to share power. These powers include recess appointment, the unilateral appointment, and nomination appointments are the backbone of the president to carry out his duty and to fulfill the obligation of the nation interest. The president has been given some of the responsibility to use them wisely to run his administration. The president has the right to get advice from the senate and attorney general when he comes to deal with the judges. The process of the appointment power that fall under the president, are nomination powers. The nomination politics take the process where the president formal appointee is received by the senate. The nomination is sent by the presiding officer to the concerned committee where the committee chairs the schedule hearing. For the nomination to go forward, the plurality members of the committee must then report that nomination to the floor. At this point, it depends with the senate majority on the floor to vote for the confirmation. In the process the nominee will wait the signed commission from the president.... ... middle of paper ... ...ons in current years where every 100 nominations, the president made roughly 10 recess appointments. The president enjoys more on the unilateral appointment powers. Work cited • Henry J. Abraham, Justices and Presidents: A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme Court (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992). • Louis Fisher, Constitutional Conflicts between Congress and the President (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1985). • G. Calvin Mackenzie, The Politics of Presidential Appointments (New York: Free Press, 1981) • The Roots of American Exceptionalism :Institutions, Culture and Policies by Charles Lockhart • www.usconstitution.net/consttop_cnb.html • http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/cia_08-10-04.html • http://www.constitutioncenter.org/explore/BasicGoverningPrinciples/SeparationofPowerasandaSystemofChecksandBalances.shtml

More about Checks and Balances

Open Document