Representative Democratic Model- Selectable Offices Part Thirty-Nine Chief Justice Of United States Intermediary Appellate Courts
Representative Democratic Model- Selectable Offices Part Thirty-Nine Chief Justice Of United States Intermediary Appellate Courts
The Chief Justice of an United States Intermediary Appellate Court should be nominated by the Vice-President. However the members of the House of Representatives who represent the particular state that the specific intermediary appellate court is located should submit the three bids for the Vice-President to choose from.
Once the Vice-President nominates his/her choice for this chief justice, the members of the U.S. Senate who represent the particular state that the specific intermediary appellate court is located confirms that choice via majority selection.
If a majority of these U.S. senators are unable to confirm the nominee, the process of bid submittal by the specific members of the House Of Representatives who represent the state that the federal appellate court is located again commences.
These specific House members again submits his/her fresh top three bids and the Vice-President chooses his/her nominee from that new submittal along with the two other bids who were not earlier nominated.
Cliff
Notes Version: The Chief Justice of an United States Intermediary
Appellate Court should be nominated by the Vice-President. Bids are to be
submitted to the VP by U.S. House members who represent the state that
the US Intermediary Appellate Court belongs.
The
majority of the US Senators who represent the particular state that the
specific intermediary appellate court is located confirms that choice
via majority selection. If they are unable to
confirm the nominee, the process again starts over with submittal of
fresh bids along with the two other bids who were not earlier nominated.
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