Yes but there is a thing with the courts called fail-safe.
Dang, (To check myself, I went on Google and asked in the search, is the Supreme Court a fail-safe mechanism?) This is the response from Google.... (There-in lies the problem...) Just Wow...
"No, the Supreme Court is not a fail-safe mechanism, and some say it has an ethics problem:
- Enforcement
The Supreme Court's code of conduct lacks enforcement power. Justices decide when to recuse themselves from cases, and they don't have to explain why.
- Ethics
Some say the Supreme Court's ethics code is weak and has loopholes. For example, there's no mechanism to enforce the code, and the financial disclosure rules aren't tight enough.
- Public trust
Public trust in the judicial branch is low, and only 39% of U.S. adults approve of how the Supreme Court is handling its job.
- Reform
Some say the Supreme Court's structure and role in the government should change. Arguments for reform include:
- Disempowerment: The Constitution may permit or require reducing the Court's power to invalidate actions of other branches of government.
- Procedural fairness: The way that Justices are selected may be too partisan or arbitrary. "