Asked by Geesh

Rewrite the following in a 5th grader’s response
How this
1803 ruling continues to affect specific modern-day political disputes between Congress and the President.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
In 1803 the Supreme Court said it could check if a law or a president’s action breaks the Constitution. That idea is called judicial review. Today, that rule still helps settle fights between Congress and the President.

- If Congress wants papers or testimony from the President and he refuses, the Court can decide who is right.
- If the President makes an executive order and people think it is unconstitutional, the Court can stop it.
- If Congress passes a law about war, taxes, or immigration and the President says no, the Court can decide if the law follows the Constitution.

Because of the 1803 ruling, the courts can stop the President or Congress when they try to do something that breaks the Constitution.