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What are the powers of the three branches of government?

This article explains what each branch of government does, how they limit each other, and how their powers work together in real U.S. cases.

KS
Admissions Strategy Advisor
📅 June 11, 2026
📖 10 min read
KS
About the Author
Kopan spent 12 years as the principal of an international school in Chicago before moving to Toronto. He now researches admissions and credit pathways, and helps students with college applications, drawing on years of guiding them through the process firsthand. Read more from Kopan Shourie →

One law can affect 330 million people, so the Constitution splits power on purpose. The legislative branch makes laws, the executive branch carries them out, and the judicial branch interprets them. That setup keeps one person or one office from running everything. The three branches of government each get a different job, but none of them gets the whole board. Congress writes laws and controls money. The president runs federal agencies and can veto bills. Courts settle disputes and decide whether laws fit the Constitution. That matters in real life because power can tilt fast. A bill can pass the House by 218 votes, clear the Senate with 51, then still face a veto or a court challenge. Knowing who does what helps you follow news, vote smarter, and spot when one branch pushes too far. A lot of people think government runs like a straight line. It does not. It moves like a tug-of-war with rules. Quick reality: The Constitution does not trust any branch to act alone, and that distrust shows up in almost every big federal decision.

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Why the Constitution Split Power

The Constitution split power after the founders saw what happened when one ruler held too much control. In 1787, they built 3 branches so lawmaking, enforcement, and judging would sit in different hands. That was not a polite theory. It was a hard fix for abuse.

The catch: The branches do not run on equal jobs alone; they run on friction. Congress has 2 chambers, the House and the Senate, and that 2-step setup slows rushed laws on purpose. If a bill dies in either chamber, it stops. That means a big idea needs more than a loud speech and a fast vote.

A community-college transfer student who wants to finish 3 CLEPs before a fall registration deadline has the same basic lesson in a smaller form. The student cannot wing all 3 tests in one weekend and expect clean results; the plan has to fit the calendar, the deadlines, and the time left. The Constitution works the same way. Each branch can act, but the other 2 can slow it down when one side moves too fast.

That slow pace looks annoying until you compare it with one-person rule. A president can win the White House with 270 electoral votes, but that does not give control of Congress or the courts. The system forces bargaining. That is the whole point. Fast government sounds nice until fast government starts ignoring people.

A lot of students who study civics memorize branch names and stop there. Bad move. The real lesson is that power gets split so mistakes, bad laws, and power grabs face a second look before they harden into policy.

Congress and the Legislative Branch

Congress sits at the center of lawmaking, and it does more than pass bills. The House and Senate write laws, approve taxes, control spending, declare war, and oversee the executive branch. The House has 435 voting members, while the Senate has 100. That split matters because it forces both population-based and state-based approval before a bill becomes law.

A bill starts in one chamber, gets debated, and then moves to the other chamber for another vote. Both chambers must pass the same exact text before it reaches the president. If the House changes one word, the Senate has to agree again. That back-and-forth can feel slow, but it stops sloppy lawmaking and gives voters time to notice what their lawmakers actually support.

Reality check: Most people think Congress only makes laws, but the spending power often matters more. Congress writes the federal budget, and that budget can top $6 trillion in a single fiscal year. Use that number as a clue: if you want to know who really controls a policy, follow the money. Lawmakers can back a program with funding, choke it off, or attach conditions to how agencies spend it.

Congress also checks the president through hearings, subpoenas, and confirmations. The Senate can approve or block many top federal jobs, including Supreme Court justices and cabinet secretaries. That gives the legislative branch a real brake on executive power, not just a ceremonial one.

A homeschool senior taking 3 CLEPs in one summer lives inside the same logic, just in a tighter window. If the first test score lands badly, the next 2 exams need a sharper plan, because each attempt eats time you cannot get back before August. Congress works the same way with deadlines and votes. Miss the window, and the bill stalls. If you want extra practice tied to this branch, US History I gives useful context on how Congress grew its powers after the early republic, and Business Law helps with the rules behind statutes and regulation. Browse the full prep options if you want a structured review path.

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The President’s Executive Powers

The president leads the executive branch, and the main job is to carry out laws passed by Congress. That means running federal agencies, appointing officials, directing foreign policy, and serving as commander in chief of the armed forces. The president also signs bills, vetoes bills, and can issue executive orders. Those orders do not replace Congress, but they can steer how agencies act inside the law.

The commander-in-chief power sounds huge, and it is, but it has limits. Congress controls military funding, can set war rules, and can declare war. Since 1942, presidents have often used military force without a formal declaration, which shows how messy real power can get. Use that fact as a warning: if a president orders action, check whether Congress funded it and whether lawmakers pushed back.

A 35-year-old paramedic studying after 12-hour shifts has to think the same way about time and limits. If that person has 5 hours a week, the best move is not trying to master everything at once. It is choosing the highest-value material first, then leaving the rest for later. Executive power works like that too. The president can move quickly in emergencies, but Congress can cut funds, and courts can block actions that break the law.

Veto power gives the president another check. Congress can override a veto with a 2/3 vote in both chambers, which means 290 votes in the House and 67 in the Senate if every member votes. That threshold is hard for a reason. A veto should force Congress to rethink a bill, not just wave it through. I like that design. It makes lawmakers defend their work instead of dumping the blame on the White House.

Executive power also covers treaties, but the Senate must approve treaties by a 2/3 vote. That 67-vote hurdle means the president cannot make long-term foreign commitments alone. If you are tracking current events, watch for that number. It tells you whether a deal has real staying power or just a headline attached to it.

For extra review tied to presidential power, US History II gives the wartime and modern examples that make this branch click faster. The full course list also helps if you want one place to map the major civics topics without hunting around.

Courts and Judicial Authority

The judicial branch interprets laws and settles disputes, and federal courts sit on top of that system. District courts hear many trial cases first, courts of appeals review those decisions, and the Supreme Court stands at the top with 9 justices. Those 9 justices do not make laws, but they decide what laws mean when people disagree.

Judicial review gives courts the power to strike down laws or government actions that conflict with the Constitution. That power grew from Marbury v. Madison in 1803, which turned the courts into a serious check on both Congress and the president. Use that date as a marker. If a law or executive order runs into constitutional doubt, courts can stop it before it spreads.

A community-college transfer student who needs 2 more credits for spring admission feels this kind of pressure in a small way. One bad move can delay a whole semester, so the student checks requirements before acting. Courts do the same thing for government power. They check whether a rule fits the Constitution before the rule gets normal life support.

Worth knowing: Courts do not react to every political fight, and that limit matters. Judges need a real case or controversy, which means they cannot just answer random political questions. That keeps the branch from becoming a roaming policy office. It also means some bad laws stay on the books until someone has standing to challenge them.

The downside? Courts move slowly, sometimes painfully slowly. A case can take months or years, and that delay can frustrate people who want instant answers. Still, that pace gives the system a chance to cool off. That matters when the other 2 branches are fighting over money, war, or speech.

Checks and Balances in Action

Checks and balances matter because each branch can make a move, then another branch can push back. That is not clutter. It is the point. A system with 3 branches and 2 chambers in Congress gives no single office a clean path to total control, and that keeps big decisions from turning into one-person commands. The trade-off is speed: a bill, veto, override, or court review can stretch a decision across weeks or months instead of a single day. Use that slow pace as a clue when you read political news; if something changed overnight, another branch probably had to answer for it.

Frequently Asked Questions about Three Branches of Government

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