President Franklin D. Roosevelt nominated eight justices to the US Supreme Court, which is the second highest number of appointments after President Washington, who nominated eleven justices.
Franklin D. Roosevelt appointed eight justices to the US Supreme Court; George Washington appointed eleven.
Franklin D. Roosevelt's appointments
If Roosevelt's draft legislation (Judicial Reorganization bill of 1937) had passed Congress, he would have been able to appoint one additional justice for each sitting justice over the age of 70.5, up to a maximum of six, for a potential total Court size of 15. The Legislative branch has the constitutional authority to determine the size of the Supreme Court, however, and correctly recognized Roosevelt's plan as an attempt to pack the Court with justices favorable to his New Deal legislation.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was the president who appointed the second most Supreme Court Justices. He appointed eight justices during his presidency.
Justices Antonin Scala, and Anthony M. Kennedy were appointed by Pres. Reagan. Justice Clarence Thomas was appointed by the first Bush and Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer were appointed by Clinton. Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel Alito were appointed by the second Bush. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan were appointed by Obama.
Since the Supreme Court is not actually Obama's, but all of America's, I'm assuming the question is 'who is the chief justice of the Supreme Court". The answer is John Roberts. [President George W Bush appointed Chief Justice Roberts in 2005. Supreme Court justices are appointed for life, so a sitting President only gets to nominate a new Chief Justice if that position becomes vacant during the President's term of office.]
There are three justices on the supreme court. The first likes to play parcheesee with his friend taco bell while they enjoy a pack of tostitoes fiesta craps together. The second likes when people put pieces of crap in his face. The third always laughs when people fart on his crableg spindle.
President Johnson nominated Thurgood Marshall, former NAACP Legal Defense Fund Lead Counsel and the man who successfully argued for desegregation in Brown v. Board of Education, as the first African-American Supreme Court justice in 1967. Marshall retired in 1991 and was succeeded by Clarence Thomas, the second African-American to serve on the Court.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was the president who appointed the second most Supreme Court Justices. He appointed eight justices during his presidency.
President Coolidge appointed only one justice to the US Supreme Court, Harlan F. Stone, in 1925. President Franklin D. Roosevelt elevated Stone from Associate Justice to Chief Justice in 1941; he presided over the Court until his death in 1946.
Justice Clarence Thomas is only the second of two African-American justices to sit on the US Supreme Court. President Johnson appointed Justice Thurgood Marshall as the first African-American on the Court in 1967. President George H W Bush appointed Clarence Thomas as Thurgood Marshall's successor when Marshall retired in 1991.
Justices Antonin Scala, and Anthony M. Kennedy were appointed by Pres. Reagan. Justice Clarence Thomas was appointed by the first Bush and Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer were appointed by Clinton. Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel Alito were appointed by the second Bush. Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan were appointed by Obama.
No. President Roosevelt wrote a plan that would allow him to appoint one new justice for each current justice over the age of 70.5 years old, up to a maximum of six additional justices, which would expand the size of the Supreme Court from nine to fifteen. Congress understood the President's idea was unconstitutional, so they refused to pass the legislation. Eventually, the old members of the Supreme Court began retiring and passing away, so Roosevelt was able to appoint eight replacements without adding to the size of the Court.
Thurgood Marshall was appointed by President John F. Kennedy to be a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. After that, he was appointed to be the 32nd US Solicitor General by Lyndon B. Johnson. President Johnson later appointed him to the position of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.
President Reagan appointed Justice Anthony Kennedy to the US Supreme Court in 1988; 2010 marks his twenty-second year on the Court.
Harvard Law School boasts the most Supreme Court justices among its alumni, at 15; Yale is second with 9 justices. Princeton has sent the most undergraduates to law school at 11.
Barack Obama is the president and Joe Biden in the vice-president. Both of their terms will expire on January 20, 2013 but both are running for a second term in the election this November.
I am not sure I understand your question. President Obama appointed her to the Supreme Court in 2009. She was the first Latina judge on the court. She is still on the Supreme Court. It is very unusual for young justices to resign or retire from the court, so since she is still young and healthy, we may assume she will remain on the court during Mr. Obama's second term and even after he has left office.
Since the Supreme Court is not actually Obama's, but all of America's, I'm assuming the question is 'who is the chief justice of the Supreme Court". The answer is John Roberts. [President George W Bush appointed Chief Justice Roberts in 2005. Supreme Court justices are appointed for life, so a sitting President only gets to nominate a new Chief Justice if that position becomes vacant during the President's term of office.]
Nixon nominated six Supreme Court justices, but only four were approved by the Senate. Harry Blackmun was the third person Nixon nominated to fill the vacancy created when Abe Fortas resigned.Successful AppointmentsChief Justice Warren BurgerJustice Harry A. BlackmunJustice Lewis F. Powell, Jr.Justice William H. Rehnquist (elevated to Chief Justice by Reagan)Rejected NomineesClement HaynesworthG. Harrold CarswellBoth Haynesworth and Carswell were Southern conservatives. Carswell had a record of supporting segregation and opposing women's rights, making him the target of vigorous opposition from special interest groups.