No one directly appoints Supreme Court Justices. The president nominates candidates, and the senate accepts or rejects the nominees. So the president indirectly appoints justices, pending senate approval.
No. The Executive Branch appoints US Supreme Court justices with the approval of the Senate.
The Executive branch.
The highest power in the executive branch is the President of the United States. The highest ranking member of the judicial branch is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
There are 3 branches in the United States. Executive branch- PRESIDENT (and vice president). They pass/veto bills, deal with foreign countries, appoint Supreme Court judges, etc. Legislative branch- CONGRESS. There are two houses of Congress, the House of Representatives and the Senate. They make laws. Judical branch- SUPREME COURT and the lower courts. They decide whether laws are constitutional or not, and keep justice.
The correct spelling is judiciary and not judiciary. The Supreme Court is the head of the judicial branch and they oversee the judiciary of the United States. There are nine judges on the Supreme Court with eight associate judges and one chief justice.
Under the New Jersey Plan, the ability to appoint the Supreme Court to the judicial branch of government was given to the executive branch.
Executive Branch.
EXECUTIVE
No. The Executive Branch appoints US Supreme Court justices with the approval of the Senate.
Executive Branch
Executive Branch
The US Senate (Legislative Branch) has the power to approve or disapprove Supreme Court appointments.
The executive branch is led by the President. The judicial branch is headed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
the judicial branch is the branch in which the Supreme Court derives its authority. However, the executive branch reserves the right to appoint judges, and the legislative branch has the right to approve or disapprove of the president's choices.
It's not exactly clear what Executive Directors you may be referring to, or what agencies. The President DOES have the power to appoint and dismiss the Attorney General of the US though.
There are three branches of government: the executive branch, the judicial branch, and the legislative branch. The Department of Justice belongs to the executive branch.
No. An Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court is only an employee of the Judicial Branch of government. A person can only be employed by one of the three independent branches (Executive, Legislative, Judicial) at a time.