Being impeached.
Being impeached is incorrect. The House votes whether to "impeach" a president with articles concerning the charges. Once impeached, the Senate votes whether to remove a president from office, while the Chief Justice presides over the trial. Bill Clinton was impeached, but not removed from office.
I think kicking a president out of office is simply referred to as removal from office.
Yes, a federal judge can be removed from office through the process of impeachment by the U.S. House of Representatives and conviction by the U.S. Senate.
Any judge that breaks the law.
The President can appoint the judge and the Senate must vote to see if teh Judge is removed from office or not.
A federal judge can be removed from office through the process of impeachment by the House of Representatives and conviction by the Senate. This requires a majority vote in the House to impeach the judge, followed by a two-thirds majority vote in the Senate to convict and remove them from office.
John pickering
Until they retire, die, or are removed from office by Congress.
To accuse a judge of a crime is called impeachment. If an official is found guilty of a crime they can be impeached and removed from their appointment.
Diction meeting
No. A judge may be removed from office for misconduct (breaking the law). But while that isn't listed as grounds for impeachment of a federal judge in and of itself. however, congress sets its own rules of evidence and there is no court of appeal for their decision. If the essence of the case were that the jurists decision was so flawed that it indicated that the jurist was permanently impaired, incompetent, or corrupt and refused to step down from the bench, then impeachment might be called for. Only 14 federal judges have been removed by impeachment since 1789.
Chambers or judge's Chambers
The judge does his business in a court room. More specifically, his office in the courthouse is called his chambers.
Yes, a judge can be removed from the bench for misconduct through a process called impeachment or disciplinary action by a judicial conduct commission. Being disbarred specifically refers to losing the license to practice law, which is different from being removed as a judge.