Any properly constituted institution or professional body requires a recognised qualification for membership to that institution.
Neither. The constitution gives the qualifications.
There are no qualifications in the judicial branch. Justices and judges are appointed.
This process led the Court to conclude that Congress' power under Article I, Sec. 5 to judge the qualifications of its Members was limited to ascertaining.
The Constitution
The Constitution
Each house of Congress has the power which was established through the U.S. Constitution to judge the elections returns, and qualifications of its members. The Senate created its own practices for judging the qualifications of its members in contested elections. This practice began in 1789.
Each house is the judge of elections, returns, and qualifications of members in Congress.
Each chamber (House and Senate) are responsible for its own members. The House and Senate both have rules committees that deal with allegations of members' wrong doing.
when a preschooler judges his or her own skills, he or she:
The Constitution sets no specific requirements. However, members of Congress, who often recommend potential nominees, and the Department of Justice, which reviews nominees' qualifications, have developed their own informal criteria. The President also typically expresses ideas about essential qualifications and personal characteristics publicly, particularly when considering nominees to the appellate courts.
The eligibility for members of Congress are spelled out in the Constitution, like those of the President. The qualifications however depend largely on the voters.
in number, length of term, and required qualifications