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Who nominates and confirms supreme court justice appointees?

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What branch of the government contains the Presidents supreme court appointees?

ecutive


What are the two names of Clinton's two Supreme Court appointees?

Supreme Court Justices' Ginsburg and Breyer were Clinton administration appointees. Ginsburg was nominated in 1993 and Breyer in 1994.


Who were Nixon's final two appointees to the Supreme Court?

Nixon's final two appointees to the Supreme Court were William Rehnquist and Lewis Powell. Rehnquist served as an associate justice from 1972 until his elevation to Chief Justice in 1986, where he remained until his death in 2005. Powell served as an associate justice from 1972 until his retirement in 1987.


Did Ronald Reagan have any supreme court appointees?

yes nd they shot lazors


Did Franklin Pierce make any Supreme Court appointees?

Yes, Pierve appointed John A. Campbell to the court.


Did Zachary Taylor have any supreme court appointees?

No. He was one of 4 Presidents that never appointed anyone to the justice.


Sandra Day O'Connor and Antonin Scalia were two of President Ronald Reagan's?

US Supreme Court appointees.


What do presidential appointees to the supreme court do?

The appointees (Justices) discuss and debate (in private) on laws brought before the court's constitutionality. If an individual files suit against the a State or the Federal Government, and is appealed to the Supreme Court, the Court has the authority to strike down a law based on if it is conflict with the constitution.


Who was the president that tried to fill the supreme court with his own appointees?

All presidents do that . . . they just have to wait until a current Justice quits or dies.


Which US President other than William Howard Taft served on the Supreme Court?

William Howard Taft is the only former president to have served on the US Supreme Court.


Who confirms all US Supreme Court appointees?

The president's nominees for the United States Supreme Court are considered by the Senate under Article II, Section 2, Clause 2 of the Constitution. It provides that presidential nominations be made with the "advice and consent" of the Senate.