The Attorney General.
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Chief Justice, Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1790-1795 Federal Judge, New Hampshire 1800-1804
well did you know that a fishing was not a chief product in the new england colonies
Manchester airport is the only one.
The Chief Justice is nominated by the US President with the "advice and consent" of the Senate after a sitting Chief Justice dies, retires, or is impeached. When the new Chief Justice is someone already sitting on the bench as an Associate Justice, his or her promotion is referred to an an "elevation," rather than an "appointment."
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Two governors of New York were Chief Justice of the United States. John Jay was Chief justice and had to resign that position when he was elected governor in 1795. Charles Evans Hughes became Chief Justice in 1930, two decades after he left the governorship.
No. The President would nominate a new Chief Justice to succeed the one who died in office, and the Senate would vote for or against confirmation. The procedure for appointing a new Chief Justice or Associate Justice is the same regardless of the reason for the vacancy.
with special permission
John Jay was the first Chief Justice of the United States (more commonly referred to as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court), who served from 1789 until he was elected Governor of New York in 1795.
The official title is Chief Justice of the United States, but most people refer to the position as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.As of 2005, the incumbent Chief Justice is John G. Roberts, Jr.
The plural form of chief justice is chief justices.