Asked by bee

Once the Supreme Court has ruled on a case, what responsibilities do the other two branches have to support that decision?(1 point)
Responses

The legislative and executive branches are not required to take any action that would support the decision of the Supreme Court on a case.
The legislative and executive branches are not required to take any action that would support the decision of the Supreme Court on a case.

The legislative branch is able to make a change to the law if they vote on it, and the executive branch is not required to take actions.
The legislative branch is able to make a change to the law if they vote on it, and the executive branch is not required to take actions.

The legislative branch makes changes to the law, and the executive branch can veto the decision of the Supreme Court.
The legislative branch makes changes to the law, and the executive branch can veto the decision of the Supreme Court.

The legislative branch makes changes to laws, and the executive branch enforces the laws.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
The legislative branch makes changes to laws, and the executive branch enforces the laws.

Explanation: Congress can pass or revise statutes (or propose constitutional amendments) within constitutional limits, while the executive branch is responsible for enforcing the Supreme Court’s rulings.