Правительство Соединенных Штатов
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Congress' oversight function takes many forms:
—committee inquiries and hearings;
—formal consultations with and reports from the executive;
—Senate advice and consent for executive nominations and treaties;
—House impeachment proceedings and subsequent Senate trials;
—House and Senate proceedings under the 25th Amendment in the event that
the president becomes disabled, or the office of the vice president falls
vacant;
—informal meetings between legislators and executive officials;
—congressional membership on governmental commissions; and
—studies by congressional committees and support agencies such as the
Congressional Budget Office, the General Accounting Office or the Office of
Technology Assessment—all arms of Congress.
The oversight power of Congress has helped to force officials out of office, change policies and provide new statutory controls over the executive. In 1949, for example, probes by special Senate investigating subcommittees revealed corruption among high officials in the Truman administration. This resulted in the reorganization of certain agencies and the formation of a special White House commission to study corruption in the government.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee's televised hearings in the late
1960s helped to mobilize opposition to the Vietnam War. Congress' 1973
Watergate investigation exposed White House officials who illegally used
their positions for political advantage, and the House Judiciary
Committee's impeachment proceedings against President Richard Nixon the
following year ended his presidency. Select committee inquiries in 1975 and
1976 identified serious abuses by intelligence agencies and initiated new
legislation to control certain intelligence activities.
In 1983, congressional inquiry into a proposal to consolidate border
inspection operations of the U.S. Customs Service and the U.S. Immigration
and Naturalization Service raised questions about the executive's authority
to make such a change without new legislation. In 1987, oversight efforts
disclosed statutory violations in the executive branch's secret arms sales
to Iran and the diversion of arms profits to anti-government forces in
Nicaragua, known as the contras. Congressional findings resulted in
proposed legislation to prevent similar occurrences.
Oversight power is an essential check in monitoring the presidency and controlling public policy.
THE JUDICIAL BRANCH
THE FEDERAL COURT SYSTEM
The third branch of the federal government, the judiciary, consists of a
system of courts spread throughout the country, headed by the Supreme Court
of the United States.
A system of state courts existed before the Constitution was drafted.
There was considerable controversy among the delegates to the
Constitutional Convention as to whether a federal court system was needed, and whether it should supplant the state courts. As in other matters under
debate, a compromise was reached in which the state courts were continued
while the Constitution mandated a federal judiciary with limited power.
Article III of the Constitution states the basis for the federal court
system:
The judicial power of the United States shall be vested in one Supreme
Court, and such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time
ordain and establish.
With this guide, the first Congress divided the nation into districts and created federal courts for each district. From that beginning has evolved the present structure: the Supreme Court, 11 courts of appeals, 91 district courts, and three courts of special jurisdiction. Congress today retains the power to create and abolish federal courts, as well as to determine the number of judges in the federal judiciary system. It cannot, however, abolish the Supreme Court.
The judicial power extends to cases arising under the Constitution; laws
and treaties of the United States; admiralty and maritime cases; cases
affecting ambassadors, ministers and consuls of foreign countries in the
United States; controversies in which the U.S. government is a party; and
controversies between states (or their citizens) and foreign nations (or
their citizens or subjects). The 11th Amendment removed from federal
jurisdiction cases in which citizens of one state were the plaintiffs and
the government of another state was the defendant. It did not disturb
federal jurisdiction in cases in which a state government is a plaintiff
and a citizen of another state the defendant.
The power of the federal courts extends both to civil actions for
damages and other redress, and to criminal cases arising under federal law.
Article III has resulted in a complex set of relationships between state
and federal courts. Ordinarily, federal courts do not hear cases arising
under the laws of individual states. However, some cases over which federal
courts have jurisdiction may also be heard and decided by state courts.
Both court systems thus have exclusive jurisdiction in some areas and
concurrent jurisdiction in others.
The Constitution safeguards judicial independence by providing that federal judges shall hold office "during good behavior"—in practice, until they die, retire or resign, although a judge who commits an offense while in office may be impeached in the same way as the president or other officials of the federal government. U.S. judges are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Congress also determines the pay scale of judges.
THE SUPREME COURT
The Supreme Court is the highest court of the United States, and the only
one specifically created by the Constitution. A decision of the Supreme
Court cannot be appealed to any other court. Congress has the power to fix
the number of judges sitting on the Court and, within limits, decide what
kind of cases it may hear, but it cannot change the powers given to the
Supreme Court by the Constitution itself.
The Constitution is silent on the qualifications for judges. There is no requirement that judges be lawyers, although, in fact, all federal judges and Supreme Court justices have been members of the bar.
Since the creation of the Supreme Court almost 200 years ago, there have been slightly more than 100 justices. The original Court consisted of a chief justice and five associate justices. For the next 80 years, the number of justices varied until, in 1869, the complement was fixed at one chief justice and eight associates. The chief justice is the executive officer of the Court but, in deciding cases, has only one vote, as do the associate justices.
The Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in only two kinds of cases:
those involving foreign dignitaries and those in which a state is a party.
All other cases reach the Court on appeal from lower courts.
Of the several thousand cases filed annually, the Court usually hears
only about 150. Most of the cases involve interpretation of the law or of
the intent of Congress in passing a piece of legislation. A significant
amount of the work of the Supreme Court, however, consists of determining
whether legislation or executive acts conform to the Constitution. This
power of judicial review is not specifically provided for by the
Constitution. Rather, it is doctrine inferred by the Court from its reading
of the Constitution, and forcefully stated in the landmark Marbury vs.
Madison case of 1803. In its decision in that case, the Court held that "a
legislative act contrary to the Constitution is not law," and further
observed that "it is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial
department to say what the law is." The doctrine has also been extended to
cover the activities of state and local governments.
Decisions of the Court need not be unanimous; a simple majority prevails, provided at least six justices—the legal quorum—participate in the decision. In split decisions, the Court usually issues a majority and a minority—or dissenting—opinion, both of which may form the basis for future decisions by the Court. Often justices will write separate concurring opinions when they agree with a decision, but for reasons other than those cited by the majority.
COURTS OF APPEALS AND DISTRICT COURTS
The second highest level of the federal judiciary is made up of the courts
of appeals, created in 1891 to facilitate the disposition of cases and ease
the burden on the Supreme Court. The United States is divided into 11
separate appeals regions, each served by a court of appeals with from three
to 15 sitting judges.
The courts of appeals review decisions of the district courts (trial courts with federal jurisdiction) within their areas. They are also empowered to review orders of the independent regulatory agencies, such as the Federal Trade Commission, in cases where the internal review mechanisms of the agencies have been exhausted and there still exists substantial disagreement over legal points.
Below the courts of appeals are the district courts. The 50 states are
divided into 89 districts so that litigants may have a trial within easy
reach. Additionally, there is one in the District of Columbia and one in
the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, not a state of the union, but part of the
United States. From one to 27 judges sit in each of the district courts.
Depending on case load, a judge from one district may temp!) rarity sit in
another district. Congress fixes the boundaries of the districts according
to population, size and volume of work. Some of the smaller states
constitute a district by themselves. while the larger states, such as New
York, California and Texas, have four districts each.
Except in the District of Columbia, judges must be residents of the district in which they permanently serve. District courts hold their sessions at periodic intervals in different cities of the district.
Most cases and controversies heard by these courts involve federal offenses such as misuse of the mails, theft of federal property, and violations of pure food, banking and counterfeiting laws. These are the only federal courts where grand juries indict those accused of crimes, and juries decide the cases.
SPECIAL COURTS
In addition to the federal courts of general jurisdiction, it has been
necessary from time to time to set up courts for special purposes. These
are known as "legislative" courts because they were created by
congressional action. Judges in these courts, like their peers in other
federal courts, are appointed for life terms by the president, with Senate
approval.
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