---> Legislative /Senate
Theoretically, the legislative branch of government has more power in a Parliamentary system than in a Presidential system of government.
Checks and balances are a system that allows multiple branches of government to share power and prevent any one branch from becoming too powerful. There are three main examples of checks and balances within the United States government: The Executive Branch has the power to veto any legislation passed by Congress. This gives the Executive Branch a check on the Legislative Branch. The Judicial Branch has the power to review legislation passed by Congress and declare it unconstitutional. This gives the Judicial Branch a check on the Legislative Branch. The Legislative Branch has the power to approve or reject any Presidential appointments to the Supreme Court. This gives the Legislative Branch a check on the Executive Branch.All three branches of government are able to act as a check on each other ensuring that no one branch is able to become too powerful and overwhelm the other branches.
Congress does that, that is the legislative branch,
Legislative...Commerce Clause gives Congress unlimited power to regulate business.
The legislative branch has the power to tax, however only the House of Representatives can introduce tax legislature, and it still requires senate approval.
The legislative branch authorizes and appropriates funds for budget spending.
Article 1 of the constitution defines the legislative branch.
The statement, "The parliamentary form of government gives most of the power of government to the executive" (that is, to the executive branch of the government), is in fact generally false. While an executive branch of a parliamentary system may in fact have tremendous freedom to act politically as its particular genius dictates, it nevertheless receives legitimacy from the legislative branch of the government, which retains the power to revoke the power of the executive branch by formal schedule, in identifiable emergency-situations, or otherwise.
The United States Constitution gives the Judicial Branch of the government the power to review all laws passed by the Legislative Branch. If the Supreme Court, which is composed of nine justices appointed for life by the president, finds that a law is unconstitutional, that law can't remain on the books.
Each branch of the US government receives its authority from the Constitution, which is not a branch of government itself, but a set of guidelines the Founding Fathers created to establish the federal government. The first three Articles assign separate powers to each branch.Article I Legislative branch (Congress: House of Representatives and the Senate)Article II Executive branch (President)Article III Judicial branch (US Supreme Court and the federal court system)
Artcle I, which creates and gives power to the Legislative branch (Congress).