Saturday, May 28, 2022

Representative Democratic Model- Selectable Offices Part Thirty-Three Federal Intermediary Appellate Court Judges (Session Four)

Representative Democratic Model- Selectable Offices 
Part Thirty-Three
Federal  Appellate Court Judges  (Session Four)

All interested applicants for this judgeship convey their interest to the federal senators of the states that the particular federal appellate court specifically serves. Those two U.S. Senators, belonging to those specific states, then sends their chosen list of their three top bid recipients to the Vice-President of The United States. 

Once the Vice-President receives the list of the three choices, he/she nominates his/her choice to the members of the U.S. House of Representatives. The majority of those those members confirms the Vice-Presidential nominee for United States Appellate Court Judge. If there is no confirmation, then the process must start from its beginning and commence from its inception. Those two U.S. Senators must submit a new list of their top three bid recipients. The original two bid recipients who were not nominated by the VPOTUS are not prohibited from being re-submitted by those two U.S. Senators.



Cliff Notes Version: The federal appellate judges are the intermediaries between the U.S. Supreme Court judges and the federal district court trial judges. Therefore it is important to have another government entity  than just the Vice-President partake in the nomination process.

However that other entity has to be based on the same democratic-based model as the VPOTUS because they both participates in the same process. Only the entity who participates in a different process (i.e confirmation) should be based on a different democratic model as the VPOTUS. 

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