Government Branches and Roles

Remember the common separation-of-powers model used in many civics lessons.

Polydeck

Congress

Voorkant

the national legislature made up of the House and Senate

Achterkant

House of Representatives

Voorkant

the chamber with representation based on population

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Senate

Voorkant

the chamber with two senators per state

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executive branch

Voorkant

the branch that enforces laws

Achterkant

President

Voorkant

the head of the executive branch

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Vice President

Voorkant

succeeds the president and can break Senate tie votes

Achterkant

cabinet

Voorkant

senior executive advisers who lead major departments

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judicial branch

Voorkant

the branch that interprets laws

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Supreme Court

Voorkant

the highest court in the federal judiciary

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lower federal courts

Voorkant

district and appellate courts that hear most federal cases

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veto

Voorkant

the president's power to reject a bill

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executive order

Voorkant

a directive about how the executive branch will operate

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judicial review

Voorkant

the courts' power to strike down unconstitutional laws or actions

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checks and balances

Voorkant

ways each branch can limit the others

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separation of powers

Voorkant

the idea that government power is split among branches

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impeachment

Voorkant

the formal process for charging and potentially removing officials

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bicameral legislature

Voorkant

a legislature with two chambers

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legislative branch

Voorkant

the branch that writes and passes laws

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