Checks and balances

/tʃɛks ænd ˈbælənsɪz/ noun phrase

A system of government where each branch has specific powers to limit and oversee the actions of the other branches, preventing any single branch from dominating. Examples include presidential vetoes, congressional impeachment, and judicial review.

The phrase combines 'check' (meaning to stop or restrain) with 'balance' (meaning equilibrium). It emerged in 18th-century American political writing as framers described their innovative constitutional mechanisms.

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