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Yes, the Supreme Court is independent of the President and Congress, so their rulings do occasionally result in conflicts with the Executive or Legislative branches. The President cannot veto Supreme Court decisions, and has no other recourse to change decisions he (or she) dislikes.

Congress can pass new legislation that satisfies the constitutional challenges raised by laws that have been nullified, unless the principle behind the law is, itself, unconstitutional, which is what they did in response to Hamden v. Rumsfeld,(2006). This also served the interests of the President, so he had an indirect impact on the Supreme Court in that case.

The Supreme Court is part of the system of "checks and balances" on the power of the Executive and Legislative branches when it ensures neither section of our tripartite government exceeds its authority and seizes too much power, or violates people's constitutional rights by passing laws that undermine guaranteed protection. Congress and the President, in turn, have means of checking the power of the Supreme Court.

Examples of Supreme Court Decisions Presidents Didn't Like

President Roosevelt, for example, wasn't particularly happy about the Court's ruling in a number of New Deal cases. The Supreme Court determined in Panama Refining Co. v. Ryan, 293 U.S. 388 (1935), that Congress had inappropriately delegated its power to the President, who attempted to impose penalties on oil companies that withdrew and shipped more than a specified amount of oil interstate and to other countries.

President Truman was annoyed by the Court's decision in the Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579 (1952), (also called the Steel Seizure Case) when the Court determined Truman had overstepped his authority by attempting to seize operation of the nation's steel manufacturers during the Korean War in order to avert a threatened United Steel Workers of America strike.

More recently, President George W. Bush was thwarted in his attempt to remove the Supreme Court from participating in legal actions initiated by detainees at Guantanamo in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 548 U.S. 557 (2006). This was only a temporary victory for the liberal faction of the Court, however, because Justice Antonin Scalia, in his dissenting opinion, drew a blueprint for Congress to circumvent the Court's ruling. It's been rumored that Congress may lose the next round of the battle, because certain members of the Supreme Court and Congress believe the military tribunals used in place of the federal courts are allowing violations of the Constitutional and Geneva Convention.

For more information about checks and balances the Executive and Legislative branch can impose on the US Supreme Court, see Related Links, below.

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Q: Can the US Supreme Court make a decision even if the President and Congress disagree?
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Related questions

Who makes the decision in US?

It's divided between the President (Obama), the Congress, and the Supreme Court.


How did a supreme court decision inflame passions?

Because they disagree with it.


Can the president overide the us supreme court?

no... Once the U. S. Supreme Court makes a decision in the interpretation of a law or a part of the Constitution, a precedent is set, and their decision holds the same weight as the original law. The President can no more overturn a Supreme Court decision than he/she can make a new law without Congress. The President can, however, sign into law a bill that has passed both houses of Congress that repeals or modifies a law or Constitutional clause on which a Supreme Court decision has been rendered, thereby, in effect, overriding the Supreme Court.


Who group within the Federal Government has the authority to limit the president's inherent powers?

The Supreme Court


What is the term for the written explanation of why some judges disagree with the supreme court' decision?

Dissent


What is the term for the written explanation of why some judges disagree with the supreme courts decision?

Dissent


What is the term for the written explanation of why some judges disagree with the supreme court decision?

Dissent


What is the term for the written explanation for why some judges disagree with the Supreme Court decision?

Dissent


What is the term for the written explanation of why some judges disagree with supreme courts decision?

Dissent


What is term for the written explanation of why some judges disagree with the supreme courts decision?

Dissent


Is the judicial branch made of the congress the supreme court or the president?

Supreme court! President is executive.


Together Congress the President and the US Supreme Court make up what?

Congress, the President and the US Supreme Court are the leaders of the three branches of the US Government: Congress = Legislative Branch President = Executive Branch Supreme Court = Judicial Branch