The correct answer is:
<h2>C. They are the country's foremost authorities on the Constitution.</h2>
Answer A is incorrect. Each state has its own Supreme Court for that purpose.
Answer B is incorrect. In some cases, where there has been an even number of justices on the court, review of a case may end in a split decision. When a split decision occurs, then the Supreme Court's action (or lack of action, we could say) doesn't establish any legal precedent in the matter.
Answer D is incorrect. The Chief Justice and Associate Justices all serve for life or until resignation. There are no "temporary" justices.
When voting rights frist started only wealthy land owners were allowed to vote which was an idea that was taken from the Greek Democracy and all members of the Greeek Assembly were elected their positions by citizens that they represented and were paid for their work in the public office just like the way the U.S. elects their officials. The U.S. also took the 3 branches of government from the Greek Democracy and the citizens right to exercise political power. The Constitution was an idea taken from the Roman Republic. The Roman Republic had a list of rules called the Twelve Tables (list of rules/Roman legal system) and both the Roman & U.S. Senate's deal with foreign policies.
I think it would be the third one
It eroded it because the colonists were forced to fight the French on the American territories. They didn't want to do this because the French were good trading partners and the colonists had good relations with them, so they became unsatisfied that they were drawn into a war that was against their well being by the British.