The US Supreme Court, as an institution, is head of the Judicial Branch. The Chief Justice of the United States presides over the Court and is the head of the judiciary during his (or her) tenure, but the Associate Justices don't really play a leadership role.
The current Chief Justice is John G. Roberts, Jr., who succeeded the late William H. Rehnquist in 2005.
The leaders of the judicial branch are the members of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court was established by the Constitution and members of the court are appointed by the President of the United States.
The judicial branch. The Supreme Court is the Judicial Branch of the US Government.
In the US, the Legislative Branch.
No. The Supreme Court of the United States is head of the Judicial branch, but there are lower courts and tribunals that are also included, such as the US District Courts and the US Courts of Appeals Circuit Courts, among others.
judicial branch
Pick any one of the following: Executive Branch (President, cabinet, enforces laws) Legislative Branch (Congress, makes laws) Judicial Branch (Supreme Court and other Article III federal courts, interpret and apply laws)
Chief Justice
a person
The US Supreme Court- judicial branch
The judicial branch. The Supreme Court is the Judicial Branch of the US Government.
the judicial branch
In Canada the Judicial Branch does the same as the us it enforces the laws
The judicial branch building is the US Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court of the United States is head of the Judicial branch.
Judicial: federal judges Executive: President, Vice President, his cabinet...
In the US, the highest court in the federal Judicial Branch is the Supreme Court of the United States. The Supreme Court is head of the Judicial Branch.
It's in the Judicial branch.
The judicial branch.