Civics Crash Course Lesson 7
The Supreme Court can strike down laws, shape national policy, and redefine your rights - but it wasn’t always this powerful. Born as “the least dangerous branch,” the judiciary has become one of the most influential forces in American life. Civics Crash Course Lesson 7 explains the courts’ constitutional structure and sources of power.
While advocating for the ratification of the Constitution, Alexander Hamilton asserted that the judiciary was “beyond comparison the weakest” as measured against the executive and legislative branches. After the Constitution was adopted, many of the leading statesmen of that era considered it more prestigious to serve in state legislatures rather than on the Supreme Court.
How, then, did the Supreme Court achieve the clout and influence it has today?