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Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia (if the chief justice is disqualified, then the presiding justice of the Supreme Court is to preside. If the presiding justice too is disqualified, then the Senate is to select another justice of the Supreme Court to preside) None specified [23] Guam (territory) (no impeachment clause) Hawaii
In 1892, the number of judges was increased to six. In 1912, the office of chief justice was created and the total number of judges was increased to seven (including the chief justice). In 1968, all the supreme court judges were re-titled as justice. See also: List of Ohio politicians; Ohio Supreme Court elections
Supreme Court justices have life tenure, meaning that they serve until they die, resign, retire, or are impeached and removed from office. For the 107 non-incumbent justices, the average length of service was 6,203 days (16 years, 359 days). [1] [A] The longest serving justice was William O. Douglas, with a tenure of 13,358 days (36
Only one Supreme Court Justice has ever been impeached. Here’s how the process works and what happened the only time it succeeded. How Impeaching a Supreme Court Justice Works
On January 5, 1804, a resolution was introduced appointing a select committee to investigate U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel Chase. [15] The resolution was approved on January 7, 1804. [16] The select committee recommended impeachment in a report submitted to the House on March 6, 1804. [17]
Two former Ohio Supreme Court justices say voter-approved changes to curb partisan gerrymandering failed because of one simple reason: self-serving politicians.. Former Ohio Supreme Court Chief ...
Ohio Supreme Court Justice Michael Donnelly, a Cleveland Democrat, is constantly making his case − in written opinions and dissents, guest columns, podcasts, media interviews − about what he ...
In 2012, for the third time, O'Neill ran for the Ohio Supreme Court. He won a two-way primary against Fanon Rucker, a judge on the Hamilton County Municipal Court. O'Neill received 72% of the vote and carried all but one of Ohio's 88 counties. In the general election, O'Neill defeated incumbent Robert Cupp by four percent. [14]