Appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate. You should know this.
No, governors are elected by the people of a state. Federal judges are appointed by the President and confirmed by Congress.
The U.S. Supreme Court members are not elected by the people. They are nominated by the President and voted on by the Congress.
Members of the Supreme Court in the United States are appointed, not elected. The President nominates candidates, and the Senate confirms or rejects the nomination. Once confirmed, justices serve for life or until they retire.
In the US, officials that are elected by the people are the US presidency, senators and Representatives. The US Supreme Court has its members nominated by the president and confirmed by the senate.
supreme court justices are appointed by the president' state judges are either elected or appointed by the governor
elected
Appointed
County judges don't appoint Supreme Court justices. At the federal level, they are nominated by the President and confirmed by a simple majority vote of the Senate.
Supreme court justices are not elected by the people. They are nominated by the president and confirmed by the senate.
The judge must be nominated by the President and then confirmed by the Senate.According to Article III of the United States Constitution, all federal judges and justices from District Courts on up to the Supreme Court are nominated by the President and referred to the Senate, who must then confirm the nomination before it becomes official.
A person approved for an office by a vote is said to be "elected". A bill approved by Congress in a vote is said to "passed". Persons appointed to a position by the President, such as a Supreme Court justice, and approved by a Senate vote are said to "confirmed".
the president appoints them and the congress questions them