Question
Which is a true statement about judicial review?
Item 12
(1 point)
Item 13
Although district courts can declare laws unconstitutional, they often let their state's Supreme Courts decide.
Item 14
In order to declare a law unconstitutional and of no effect, all justices must agree.
Item 15
Judges can decide whether or not to uphold the Constitution in making case rulings.
Item 16
The power of judicial review is not specifically mentioned in the Constitūtion.
Item 12
(1 point)
Item 13
Although district courts can declare laws unconstitutional, they often let their state's Supreme Courts decide.
Item 14
In order to declare a law unconstitutional and of no effect, all justices must agree.
Item 15
Judges can decide whether or not to uphold the Constitution in making case rulings.
Item 16
The power of judicial review is not specifically mentioned in the Constitūtion.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The true statement about judicial review is:
**Item 16: The power of judicial review is not specifically mentioned in the Constitution.**
Judicial review is the ability of courts to evaluate the constitutionality of legislative acts and executive actions, and while it has been established through court decisions (most notably Marbury v. Madison), it is not explicitly outlined in the Constitution itself.
**Item 16: The power of judicial review is not specifically mentioned in the Constitution.**
Judicial review is the ability of courts to evaluate the constitutionality of legislative acts and executive actions, and while it has been established through court decisions (most notably Marbury v. Madison), it is not explicitly outlined in the Constitution itself.
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