The appointment of a Supreme Court Justice is an infrequent event of major significance in American politics. Each appointment is important because of the enormous judicial power the Supreme Court exercises as the highest appellate court in the federal judiciary. Appointments are infrequent, as a vacancy on the nine member Court may occur only once or twice, or never at all, during a particular President's years in office. Under the Constitution, Justices on the Supreme Court receive lifetime appointments. Such job security in the government has been conferred solely on judges and, by constitutional design, helps insure the Court's independence from the President and Congress. The procedure for appointing a Justice is provided for by the Constitution in only a few words. The "Appointments Clause" (Article II, Section 2, clause 2) states that the President "shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint ... Judges of the Spreme Court." The process of appointing Justices has undergone changes over two centuries, but its most basic feature -- the sharing of power between the President and Senate -- has remained unchanged: To receive lifetime appointment to the Court, a candidate must first be nominated by the President and then confirmed by the Senate. Although not mentioned in the Constitution, an important role is played midway in the process (after the President selects, but before the Senate considers) by the Senate Judiciary Committee. On rare occasions, Presidents also have made Court appointments without the Senate's consent, when the Senate was in recess. Such "recess appointments," however, were temporary, with their terms expiring at the end of the Senate's next session. The last recess appointments to the Court, made in the 1950s, were controversial, because they bypassed the Senate and its "advice and consent" role. The appointment of a Justice might or might not proceed smoothly. Since the appointment of the first Justices in 1789, the Senate has confirmed 120 Supreme Court nominations out of 154 received. Of the 34 unsuccessful nominations, 11 were rejected in Senate roll-call votes, while nearly all of the rest, in the face of committee or Senate opposition to the nominee or the President, were withdrawn by the President or were postponed, tabled, or never voted on by the Senate. Over more than two centuries, a recurring theme in the Supreme Court appointment process has been the assumed need for excellence in a nominee. However, politics also has played an important role in Supreme Court appointments. The political nature of the appointment process becomes especially apparent when a President submits a nominee with controversial views, there are sharp partisan or ideological differences between the President and the Senate, or the outcome of important constitutional issues before the Court is seen to be at stake.
Separate chapters on the bureaucracy, the independent regulatory commissions, and the budgetary process probe these questions from different angles. The new fourth edition addresses the line item veto and its tortuous history and prospects.
Arthur S. Link , Wilson : The Road to the White House ( Princeton , New Jersey , 1947 ) , 25 . 38. Quoted in Link , 96 . 39. Quoted in Link , 96 . 40. Quoted in Link , 96 . 41. Quoted in Link , 96 . 42. Quoted in Link , 111-12 . 43.
Evaluates Lincoln's talents as a commander in chief in spite of limited military experience, tracing the ways in which he worked with, or against, his senior commanders to defeat the Confederacy and reshape the presidential role. 150,000 ...
Henry J. Merry , The Constitutional System : The Group Character of the Elected Institutions ( New York : Praeger ... In re Neagle , 135 U.S. 1 ( 1890 ) as quoted in Ann Thomas and A.J. Thomas , Jr. , The War - Making Powers of the ...
... William H. Rehnquist Justice Rehnquist Antonin Scalia Justice Powell Robert H. Bork (not confirmed) Justice Powell Anthony M. Kennedy William P. Rogers Susie M. Sharp Joseph T. Sneed J. Clifford Wallace William H. Webster Malcolm R.
Johns Hopkins University Press : Excerpts from The Economic Thought of Woodrow Wilson ( Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press , 1943 ) , pp . 80 , 94 , 122 , 132 . The New Republic : Poem by Langston Hughes reprinted from The New ...
Franck, The Tethered Presidency; and Robert J. Spitzer, President and Con— gress: Executive Hegemony at the Crossroads of American Government (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1993), p. xiv. 12. Jean Blondel, Political Leadership: ...
The Seven Laws of Presidential Leadership presents the traditional topics of history, rhetoric, politics, Congress, the Courts, and other subjects through an innovative method that sparks student interest and increases teaching options.
... secure the cooperation of an informed Congress , and enlist the support of an informed electorate . Ralph A. Dungan An aide to John F. Kennedy both in the Senate and the White House . Special Assistant to Presidents John F. Kennedy ...
He is the Learned Hand Professor at Harvard Law School, co-founder of Lawfare, and a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Together, in this book, they set the terms for the national discussion to come about the presidency, its powers ...