The Constitutional Topics pages at the USConstitution.net site are presented 
to delve deeper into topics than can be provided on the Glossary Page or in the FAQ 
pages. This Topic Page concerns the Separation of Powers. The concept of 
Separation of Powers is embodied in the Constitution in the 1st Article, in the 2nd Article, and in the 3rd Article. Another Topics Page, on The Government provides details about the make-up 
of the various branches and may also be of use.
The United States Constitution is deliberately inefficient.
The Separation of Powers devised by the framers of the Constitution was 
designed to do one primary thing: to prevent the majority from ruling with an 
iron fist. Based on their experience, the framers shied away from giving any 
branch of the new government too much power. The separation of powers provides 
a system of shared power known as Checks and 
Balances.
Each of these branches has certain powers, and each of these powers is 
limited, or checked, by another branch.
For example, the President appoints judges and departmental secretaries. 
But these appointments must be approved by the Senate. The Congress can pass 
a law, but the President can veto it. The Supreme Court can rule a law to be 
unconstitutional, but the Congress, with the States, can amend the 
Constitution.
All of these checks and balances, however, are inefficient. But that’s by 
design rather than by accident. By forcing the various branches to be 
accountable to the others, no one branch can usurp enough power to become 
dominant.
The following are the powers of the Executive: veto power over all bills; 
appointment of judges and other officials; makes treaties; ensures all laws are 
carried out; commander in chief of the military; pardon power. The checks can 
be found on the Checks and Balances Page.
Historically, the concept of Separation of Powers dates back as far as 
ancient Greece. The concepts were refined by contemporaries of the Framers, 
and those refinements influenced the establishment of the three branches in the 
Constitution.
Aristotle favored a mixed government composed of monarchy, aristocracy, and 
democracy, seeing none as ideal, but a mix of the three useful by combining the 
best aspects of each. In his 1656 Oceana, James Harrington brought 
these ideas up-to-date and proposed systems based on the separation of power. 
John Locke, in his 1690 Civil Government, second treatise, separated the 
powers into an executive and a legislature. Montesquieu’s 1748 Spirit of 
the Laws expanded on Locke, adding a judiciary. The framers of the 
Constitution took all of these ideas and converted the theories into practical 
applications.
When discussing Separation of Power, is it helpful to contrast the American 
System to the governments of other nations. This list below is far from a 
representative sample of nations or systems. The United States, Britain, 
France, Canada, and Mexico are actually more similar than they are different, 
especially when the whole range of nations is taken into account. However, 
sometimes the smaller differences between similar systems can be interesting 
and illustrative. It is left to the reader to conduct studies of more 
disparate systems.
The British Parliamentary system works like this: There are two houses of 
the legislature. The upper house, the House of Lords, has traditionally 
consisted of the nobility of Britain: dukes, earls, viscounts, barons, and 
bishops. As of 2005, the very existence of the House of Lords is in question. 
There are some calling for its abolition, but a combination elected/lifetime 
appointment system seems more likely. A popular proposal calls for 80% of the 
body to be elected and the name to change to the “Second Chamber.” In 1999, 
the House of Lords had over 1300 members. Today, there are just over 700 
members. The House of Lords serves a judicial function as a court of final 
appeal, but as a legislative body, is widely regarded as ineffectual. It can 
delay passage of bills issued by the lower house, though it cannot veto 
them.
The lower house, the House of Commons, consists of MPs (Members of 
Parliament) elected from one of 646 electoral districts. In the Commons, 
majority rules. The majority party makes all the laws. The minority has little 
voice. The Prime Minister, Britain’s closest approximation of the American 
President, is an MP chosen by the majority. The judiciary has no power of 
review as in the U.S. Since Britain has no formal, written constitution, no law 
can be unconstitutional.
The head of state, analogous still with the American President, is the 
monarch (King or Queen). The monarch must approve of all bills, though the 
process today is little more than a rubber stamp. The Speaker of the House of 
Commons, elected by the House, acts as the referee in debate between the 
majority and the minority. The MPs in the House of Commons sit for five years, 
or until the monarch (at the Prime Minister’s behest) dissolves Parliament and 
calls for new elections. The Prime Minister also heads the Cabinet.
In Britain, the majority party in the House of Commons holds all of the 
power. The judiciary has no power of review. The House of Lords holds little 
more than delaying powers. By tradition, the monarch does not veto bills 
passed by the Parliament. And the de facto head of state, the Prime 
Minister, is a member of the Commons.
In France, the President is elected for five year terms by the people to a 
powerful position. The President can, and has, dissolve Parliament and call for 
new elections. The President appoints the Prime Minister. Together, the 
President and Prime Minister head the executive branch. The President does not 
have veto power over legislation, but can ask Parliament to reconsider a bill. 
The Prime Minister heads The Government, akin to the American Cabinet. Most 
bills passed into law originate with the Government. The President presides 
over the Cabinet, and has vast emergency powers. The French President, de 
jure does not have many powers, but because of the French election system, 
he usually has great popular support and is able to leverage that into 
political power. When the President’s party holds power in the legislature, he 
is quite powerful, but it is quite diminished when the legislature is not 
controlled by his party.
The Prime Minister, chosen by the President from the majority party in the 
National Assembly (the lower house), has power that varies in direct 
correlation to that of the President. The Prime Minister chooses the members 
of the Government and is head of the military and the civil service. Deputies 
of the Assembly are elected by the people for five year terms. There are 
currently 577 deputies. The Assembly can vote to dissolve the Government, but 
in reality, such a move is unlikely.
The Senate, the upper house, is more powerful than the House of Lords in 
Britain, but not by much. Senators are elected by the various local officials 
from across the country to six year terms. There are currently 321 
senators.
There is a written French Constitution. Laws, after passage but before 
enactment, can be reviewed by the Constitutional Council. Review is either 
requested (for most laws) or mandatory (for laws affecting the Constitution). 
Its nine members consist of three appointed by the Government, three by the 
Assembly, and three by the Senate. The Council is designed almost like the 
U.S. Supreme Court, but it has little of the power of that court.
For the French, the majority of the power lies in the hands of the 
Government. If the President is of the same party as the Government, he can 
also wield considerable power. The Assembly is highly limited to legislate on 
topics specifically spelled out in the Constitution; the Senate has far less 
power than the Assembly. The Constitutional Council has not proven to be the 
force in French government that it appears to have been designed to be.
Canada was a subject of Britain for several centuries, and its system has 
many similarities with the British system. Until 1982, Canada did not have full 
control over its own constitution. Prior to 1931, the British Parliament could 
still legislate for Canada, but in 1931, much of that control was passed to the 
Canadians. More control passed in 1949, but full control was not gained until 
1982, when the Constitution Act of 1982 gave Canada full control over its own 
constitution. Officially, the monarch of Canada (also the monarch of the United 
Kingdom) remains the Canadian head of state and is represented in governmental 
affairs by a governor-general. De facto, however, the monarch has no 
real control of any kind over Canada. In an interesting circular system 
repeated throughout the former British commonwealth, the governor-general is 
“recommended” to the monarch by the Canadian Prime Minister and the 
governor-general in turn de jure appoints the Prime Minister from the 
members of the House of Commons.
Canada is a federal system akin to that of the United States, with each of 
its ten provinces having a great deal of control over internal policy. Canada’s 
three territories have less autonomy. Canadian federalism differs from American 
federalism, however, in that the provinces have specific powers reserved to 
them and all other powers belong to the federal government. The federal 
government has veto power over all provincial law-making. The branches of 
government are a mix of the British and American systems. The legislature is 
parliamentary and bicameral, split between the House of Commons and the Senate. 
The members of the Senate are recommended by the House of Commons and appointed 
by the governor-general. Appointment is for life or until age 75. There are 
currently 105 members. Members of the House of Commons are elected by the 
people; elections must be held at least once each five years. There are 
currently 308 members. The executive is composed of a Prime Minister and a 
cabinet.
A privy council is in place that works to supplement and support the Prime 
Minister and the cabinet. The members of the council include the Chief Justice 
of the Supreme Court; the staff is comprised of career public servants, 
ensuring continuity even when there is a change in the leadership party in the 
parliament. The Privy Council Office is separate and distinct from the Prime 
Minister’s Office. The former is concerned with the efficient running of the 
government and is generally considered non-partisan. The latter is completely 
partisan and is concerned with the advancement of the platform of the Prime 
Minister and the ruling party.
The judiciary is more powerful in Canada, much like that of the United 
States; the Supreme Court has nine members which serve for life or until age 
75. Each province has its own judicial system as well; these provincial courts 
work at the lowest level in the system, with the Supreme Court at the highest 
level and with superior courts in between. Each province has a Court of 
Appeal, and in all cases, the Supreme Court is a final court of appeal. The 
federal courts also act as the sole courts of Canada’s three territories. The 
constitution allows the Supreme Court to be used as an advisory court, issuing 
opinions on the constitutionality of laws without any actual dispute needing to 
be in play.
Mexico has had a tumultuous history, as it has had to deal with foreign 
invaders, poverty, and its strong neighbor to the north. What Mexico has for a 
political system has evolved with all of these influences. Its current 
constitution has been in force since 1917 and it has been amended at least 450 
times since its enactment. The Constitution is divided into two major parts, 
the Individual Guarantees and the definition of the structure of the 
government. One notable feature of the Guarantees is that the freedoms 
enumerated therein are reserved “by any individual,” regardless of citizenship 
or status. The Mexican government is explicitly divided into the same three 
branches as the United States, legislative, executive, and judicial. It is a 
federal republic like its North American neighbors, with 31 states dividing the 
varied geography, plus one Federal District. Like U.S. states and Canadian 
provinces, much of the everyday law is left to the Mexican states’ 
jurisdiction.
The Mexican legislature, the General Congress, is bicameral and divided 
between a 128-member Senate and a 500-member Chamber of Deputies. The members 
of the Chamber are elected every three years. 300 members are elected in an 
at-large election where seats are distributed to parties on a national 
proportional basis. The remaining 200 are allocated to the states in 
proportion to their population. Deputies cannot serve more than one term in 
succession.
Senators are elected every six years. Each state has four Senators as does 
the Federal District. Two of the four are allocated to the majority political 
party; a third is allocated to the next highest minority party; the fourth is 
selected based on proportional representation. Senators may not be reelected 
to a seat.
Certain subjects are the exclusive domain of one house of the Congress; 
others must be agreed to by both houses. Legislation may be introduced by any 
member of Congress, the President, or a state legislature. A Permanent 
Committee, comprised of 15 Deputies and 14 Senators, meets when the Congress is 
in recess.
The Mexican executive is the President, elected to a single six-year term. 
The President is directly elected by the people. In the case of disability, 
the Congress can designate an interim President and call for new elections. 
The President is the head of state and head of government. Constitutionally, he 
is held to the will of the Congress – he cannot leave the country, for example, 
without the permission of the Congress.
The judicial system of Mexico divides the national courts into four 
hierarchical parts. At the top is the Supreme Court of Justice, followed by 
the Electoral Tribunal, Circuit Courts, and District Courts. The Supreme Court 
is made up of eleven Ministers; the Court can operate en banc (as a 
whole) or in divisions of five ministers. The Chief Minister is elected every 
four years by the ministers from within the Court; no one person can be 
immediately reelected to the Chief position. Ministers are appointed to the 
Court for 15 year terms. The federal courts act as courts of appeal for the 
state courts, and act as courts of appeal for themselves according to the 
previously noted hierarchy. Only through special rulings known as 
jurisprudencias can the decision of a higher court become legally 
binding on all lower courts.
Is the American system superior to any of these, or to any other, system of 
government? That depends on where you sit. The French and the British might 
scoff at the fact that our head of state, the President, has no power to make 
laws. They might cringe at the thought that judges can render the will of the 
people, in the form of a duly passed law, null and void. Canadians might think 
that state powers ought to be enumerated; Mexicans might marvel at the 
longevity of some career American politicians.
Americans might look with amusement at the institution of the British 
monarchy, and its continued hold, if only on paper, on Canada. Americans might 
cringe at the British thought of majority rule with no written constitution to 
be used as a guide or rule book. We might worry that the French Presidency has 
the potential to turn tyrannical by the misuse of emergency powers. We might 
worry that a Mexican judiciary, without lifetime tenure or a solid stare 
decisis system might lead to incoherent judicial policy.
But recall that each of these nations, and the hundred others in this world, 
have political and social traditions that sometimes date back a thousand years. 
Despite what Americans might think are odd institutions and traditions in 
France, Britain, Canada, Mexico, and elsewhere, these are all prosperous 
nations. The systems work in the context of each nation, even if the details 
could not work in some others.