Jason Wishert of Multnomah County Oregon. Appointed to the Citizen Review Board, part of the Court Programs and Services Division, Office of the State Court Administrator, Oregon Judicial Department.
Appointments to the Supreme Court of the US are for life.
The US Senate (Legislative Branch) has the power to approve or disapprove Supreme Court appointments.
No one. Supreme Court justice don't make political appointments; that authority falls to the President, with the approval of the Senate.
There's no limit; they are lifetime appointments. They can retire if they wish, or they can hang on until they die.
no, but he made a few appointments to the lower courts which are where the supreme court justices are often taken from.
There's no limit; they are lifetime appointments. They can retire if they wish, or they can hang on until they die.
President Nixon made four Supreme Court appointments between 1969 and 1971. These appointments were Warren E. Burger as Chief Justice in 1969, Harry A. Blackmun in 1970, Lewis F. Powell Jr. in 1971, and William H. Rehnquist in 1971.
There are no current Supreme Court justices who were recess appointments. However, President George Washington appointed John Rutledge as Chief Justice in a recess appointment; his appointment was later rejected by the Senate. President Eisenhower also made three recess appointments to the Supreme Court, all of whom were later confirmed by the Senate.
Chief Justice of India It is a system under which appointments and transfers of judges are decided by a forum of the Chief Justice of India and the four senior-most judges of the Supreme Court. It has no place in the Indian Constitution. Article 124 deals with the appointment of Supreme Court judges.
Former Justice Sandra Day O'Connor celebrated her 81st birthday on March 26, 2011.
The US Senate (Legislative Branch) has the power to approve or disapprove Supreme Court appointments.
The Legislateive branch must aprove all of Supreme Court appointments