This research provides a new way to understand the President's agenda and impact. Because the court lacks the ability to carry out that decision, it relies on political entities and the public to maintain legitimacy. We believe that the decision the president will disclose about the question will depend on the degree of implementation and will encourage the court to postpone the administration. We examined the correspondence of the Supreme Court against the president's preference for civil liberty and rights litigation. We believe that in this field he will work hard to protect his interests, if the policy field is particularly important for the President. We found that the greater the proportion of national domestic conditions in the subject areas of citizens freedom and rights, the more likely that the court will dominate the president's instructions.
Public policy is an authoritative decision to be made in legislation (university), administrative (president) or judicial (including the Supreme Court) branch, leading or influencing others' actions, actions or decisions (longest) It is aimed at. Year). When public policy involves or influences the pursuit of health, they become health policy. Therefore, it can be defined that health policy is "the sum of the principles stated or not shown and characterizes the distribution of resources, services, and political influences that affect population health" (Miller 1987 , P. 15).
What influenced the decision of the US Supreme Court? For decades, social scientists have paid attention to the ideology of individual judges. The ruling of the Supreme Court transcended this focus by examining how the judges are influenced by their own characteristics of institutional courts and their position in the political system. Using interpretation - historical institutionalism and reasonable choice theory - a group of major scholars examined the influence of the law, the independence of the Supreme Court, the dynamics of the alliance structure, and the influence of social movements. The volume and outstanding contributors to the extensive make it a must read for those interested in the political character of the Supreme Court or institution.
The Supreme Court's decision is determined by a wide range of social and political forces, including elected government decisions, public opinion, and elite opinion. This section highlights the view that the courts are part of a larger society in attracting attention to the specific ways in which social and political forces affect court decisions. At the same time, some of these factors are actually more prominent than others, some factors are direct constraints, the other factors are more indirect. For example, opinion of public opinion and elite is based on the appointment of the president's court, whether the senator approves the candidate, whether the elected government complies with the court's ruling, sometimes the social norms affecting the court's decision It affects. In these respects public opinion and the opinion of the elite indirectly influence the decision of the Supreme Court.