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      Picking Judges
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      Book

      Picking Judges

      DOI link for Picking Judges

      Picking Judges book

      Presidential Briefings

      Picking Judges

      DOI link for Picking Judges

      Picking Judges book

      Presidential Briefings
      ByNancy Maveety
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2007
      eBook Published 25 October 2017
      Pub. Location New York
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315126418
      Pages 132
      eBook ISBN 9781315126418
      Subjects Politics & International Relations
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      Maveety, N. (2007). Picking Judges: Presidential Briefings (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315126418

      ABSTRACT

      What defines a president? Is it policymaking? A good relationship with the American people? Or is it legacy? Most would argue that legacy imprints a president in the American consciousness. A president's federal judicial appointees may be his or her most lasting political legacy. Because federal judges serve for life, their legal policymaking endures long after a president's term in office is over. Presidents who care about serving their mandate, who desire to maximize their policy agenda, and who wish to influence the nation's constitutional fabric appoint as many federal judges as possible.This new volume in the Presidential Briefings series shows how the president's appointment power has expanded beyond its bare constitutional outlines. In exercising their constitutional powers while paying heed to political opportunities, presidents and the Senate have together created our modern judicial appointment politics. Presidents consider a host of demographic and ideological factors, candidate qualities, and electoral politics.Nancy Maveety examines the dynamics of screening and choosing judicial nominees and analyses the institutional calculus in securing their confirmation in the face of senatorial obstruction. Maveety shows how a president can adapt to particular circumstances and provides an outline for synergistically staffing the federal judiciary, thus securing a legacy for all time.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter One|34 pages

      History

      chapter Two|18 pages

      Candidates

      chapter Three|32 pages

      Context

      chapter Four|20 pages

      How

      chapter Five|14 pages

      Why

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