No. The President who attempted a court-packing plan to protect his New Deal legislation was Franklin D. Roosevelt, in his proposed Judiciary Reorganization Bill of 1937.
For more information on President Roosevelt, court-packing and New Deal legislation, see Related Questions, below.
By the president
The president.
No. This is out of his power. The cases work their way through lower courts and the justices are not required to take a case. The federal government can bring a case through the courts, but the president isn't involved.
No, the Supreme Court is separate from all other courts. The president nominates judges to federal courts and Congress approves them.
make a bill that placed more justices on the Supreme Court
cases in which the president appoints the attorney
Congress
This was the Supreme Court of 1938. They basically decided that it would be the President who would determine the number of lower courts in the system. It made it much easier for future Presidents to designate Supreme Court members.
Georgia Law
the president in consultation with chief justice of the supreme court
im doing the study guide too
It depends which supreme court you are referring to. Countries have different legislation and hierarchy for courts of law.