No. The Supreme Court has no part in creating or approving the federal budget; this is a task shared by the Executive and Legislative branches of the US government.
The Supreme court decision on Marbury version Madison by the federal judiciary. This is part of the court systems.
No, the Supreme Court is separate from all other courts. The president nominates judges to federal courts and Congress approves them.
The Supreme Court of the United States has federal jurisdiction. The Supreme court can also be used as an appeals court for state and local charges.
State and federal: the US Supreme Court is head of the Judicial branch and the highest appellate court for federal questions (federal law, US Constitution); each State has its own Supreme Court (or its equivalent) that is the final venue for state constitutional and legal issues.
McCulloch v. Maryland
The Supreme Court overturned the Keating-Owen Child Labor Act in 1918 because it deemed the federal government's regulation of child labor as unconstitutional. The Court ruled that the Act violated the Tenth Amendment and infringed upon the rights of states to regulate labor within their borders.
yes the supreme council of the union is same as the federal supreme council...
The US constitution is the supreme law of the land. Following that, Federal law is supreme (or controlling).
A federal mandate
Gregory v. Ashcroft, 501 U.S. 452 (1991)
You haven't told us what this is. In any event, if something is proposed as an amendment, it is because it would not be legal under the existing constitution and even if passed by Congress would be overturned by the Supreme Court.
Federal Securities Act
federal sovereignty
No
a mandate
Preemption