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Show CHAPTER VUI SePARATION Of POWERS In defining separation of powers tions. The Introduction of the term admits that separation of power is impossibility. a unit. This Is It COAnot be other end each to say in cation be,tween the ports is constitutional to means. putting the divided Into parts ClS$umption based Q for it prGetieal upon whole and mClnife,ts itself • field apart from the othersi where proper communl- devices, Idea is thot en separation of func extremely important, c:onstitutiooally lock.ing, legislative • a up with seporote parti, each dJstihct from the a the President operates in the the executive and theoretical The distance from Congreu the few constitutional way of t'functioft$" Is that Government is chopped operating Q ThomQ$ views It Is sp,anned by to the Congress performs it is, the provided by President, extra- in addition politlcol party. Another executive and (udiciot functions, ludiciat and legislative fields, and the iudiciot domatn. ,poper, it comes Government is one; it is back into 0 single whole whole; in 1 in If it is practice.' iiThere is only one Government of the United Shltes, not three. The that there should be coordination of ideas Gnd i"8OI,s, ond that the Government of the United Stott. was not made up simply of the Congress or the President or the Judiciary, but that the three together mode one sovernment. Those three branehes together have mGde this cQuntry what it is. Congressional Record, Vol. 94, p. 1107, (80th Congress, 1st SeQ., February 5, 1948). theory was O! 147 |