The President makes all federal judicial appointments, meaning the President can choose to keep a certain political party or judge from ever being considered for a judicial post during their term of office, before they go through the Senate confirmation process.
Selects judges
Legislative branch (make laws) Executive branch (president) Judicial branch (enforce laws)
Congress, Legislative, President, executive, the courts, judicial
- Congress- Legislative- President- Executive- The Courts- Judicialname one branch of part of the government
The 3 branches of the US federal government comprise the Legislative Branch which makes laws, the Executive Branch, which enforces those laws, and the Judicial Branch, which ensures that those laws meet the requirements of the US Constitution.
Legislative (other two are Executive and Judicial)
The judicial branch building is the US Supreme Court.
Some people who serve in the Judicial branch are Judges and Lawyers.
There are no qualifications in the judicial branch. Justices and judges are appointed.
legislative branch, judicial branch, and executive branch
The Executive branch, the Legislative branch , and the Judicial branch.
The President, head of the Executive Branch of US government, nominates judges to federal courts. They must be approved by a simple majority vote of the Senate before they are appointed."Recommend" is really the wrong word for the President's role in the judicial appointment process. Members of the Legislative and Judicial branches can recommend (or suggest) a candidate to the President, but only the President has the power to nominate (name the official candidate).
The U.S. Supreme Court