president
Judges at the provincial level are appointed by the premiere
Both the Executive and the Legislative branches share the power of appointing federal judges. The President will appoint someone, and the Senate has to approve it.
In the U.S., it varies by state. Federal judges are not elected; they are appointed.
The U.S. Senate must confirm such appointments.
1. appointing new judges who in principle have philosophies consistent with the president.2. limiting the jurisdiction of the federal courts with an executive order.3. forcing Congress to consider impeachment of specific judges.4. declaring martial law, which restricts judicial decision-making.
No. He does not decide who wins cases. Under the constitution the judiciary is a separate branch of government. He can change the makeup of the court by appointing judges that agree with his views. By doing the federal court and Supreme Court decisions will influence the cases that they hear.
Federal judges on the US Supreme Court are called justices.
Supreme Court Justices, Federal Appeals Court Judges, and Federal District Court Judges. I hope this helps you :) love Stephanie forever and always
The President nominates judges and justices to the following courts:Supreme Court of the United StatesUS Court of Appeals Circuit CourtsUS District CourtsUS Court of International TradeUS Bankruptcy CourtsUS Tax CourtUS Court of Federal ClaimsUS Territorial CourtsUS Court of Appeals for the Armed ForcesUS Court of Veterans AppealsWhile the President is actively involved in appointing appellate court judges and justices, he (or she) often nominates judges to lower courts and to Article I legislative courts (e.g., US Bankruptcy Courts, US Court of Federal Claims) at the suggestion of Senators in the President's own political party, as a matter of Senatorial courtesy.
Are appointed to the court by the President
Supreme Court Justices, Federal Appeals Court Judges, and Federal District Court Judges. I hope this helps you :) love Stephanie forever and always