To appoint a federal official, the President of the United States nominates an individual for a specific position, such as a cabinet member or federal judge. The nomination is then sent to the Senate, where it undergoes a confirmation process, which typically includes hearings and a vote. If the Senate approves the nomination by a majority vote, the official is confirmed and can assume their duties. Some positions may require different processes, but this is the general procedure for federal appointments.
Both the president and governor can appoint judges. The governor can appoint his states judges and the president appoints federal judges. The president can only appoint ambassadors.
President
Franklin Roosevelt, Dwight Eisenhower, and Ronald Reagan were the only ones in the last century to appoint a majority of the federal bench.
federal judicial district
Yes, even if indirectly.
federal judicial district
The President of the United States has the power to appoint many different offices. These include federal judges, ambassadors, cabinet officers, and military leaders.
Harry Hopkins
577
he appointed commissaries, or official substitutes
In the US it is four years elsewhere may be different
He was angry because Garfield did not appoint him to the federal office he was seeking.