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  1. Since 1789, there have been 165 formal nominations (of 146 persons) to the Supreme Court; 128 of them (123 persons) have been confirmed. [3] The most recent nomination to be confirmed was that of Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022. [4]

  2. Eight justices during that era were confirmed on the same day they were formally nominated, including Edward Douglass White as an associate justice in 1894 and again as chief justice in 1910, and on a voice vote both times. From the mid-1950s to 2020, however, the process took much longer.

    • How Did Obama Get The Chance to Nominate Three Justices?
    • Is It Rare For A President to Get to Nominate Three Justices?
    • So Why Were Obama's 3 Nominees Such A Big Deal?
    • Which President Has Chosen The Most Supreme Court Justices?
    • So How Does Obama's 3 Picks Compare to Other Presidents?

    Obama was able to nominate three justices because two members of the Supreme Court retired and a third died in office. The first retirement, that of Justice David Souter, came a short time after Obama took office in 2009. Obama's chose Sonia Sotomayor, who later become the first Hispanic member and third woman justice to serve on the high court. A ...

    Actually, no. It's not thatrare. Since 1869, the year Congress increased the number of justices to nine, 12 of the 24 presidents preceding Obama successfully chose at least three members of the Supreme Court. The most recent president to get three justices on the high court was Ronald Reagan, from 1981 through 1988. In fact, one of those nominees, ...

    That Obama had the opportunity to nominee three Supreme Court justices was not, in an of itself, the big story. The timing — his final 11 months in office — and the impact his choice would have had on setting the ideological course on the court for decades to come made his third nomination such a big news story and, of course, a political battle fo...

    President Franklin Delano Roosevelt got eight of his nominees on the Supreme Court over the course of just six years in office. The only presidents who have come close are Dwight Eisenhower, William Taft and Ulysses Grant, whom each got five nominees on the court.

    With three picks for the Supreme Court, Obama is exactly average. The 25 presidents since 1869 have gotten 75 nominees on the high court, meaning the average is three justices per president. So Obama falls right in the middle. Here is a list of presidents and the number of their Supreme Court nominees who made it to the court since 1869. The list i...

    • Rehnquist. Sep 6, 2005. 78-22 No. 245. C. Sep 29, 2005. Roberts, John G., Jr. O'Connor. Jul 29, 2005. W. President Clinton, Bill. Breyer, Stephen G. Blackmun.
    • Burger. Jun 20, 1986. 65-33 No. 266. C. Sep 17, 1986. O'Connor, Sandra Day. Stewart. Aug 19, 1981. 99-0 No. 274. Sep 21, 1981. President Ford, Gerald. Stevens, John Paul.
    • Warren. May 23, 1969. 74-3 No. 35. C. Jun 9, 1969. President Johnson, Lyndon. Thornberry, Homer. Fortas. Jun 26, 1968. W. Oct 4, 1968.
    • Warren. Jun 26, 1968. W. Oct 4, 1968. Marshall, Thurgood. Clark. Jun 13, 1967. 69-11 No. 240. C. Aug 30, 1967. Fortas, Abe. Goldberg. Jul 28, 1965. V. Aug 11, 1965. President Kennedy, John.
  3. Sep 19, 2020 · According to a Congressional Research Service report, from that point on only six Supreme Court nominees have not been referred to the committee—a former president, a senator, and other easily...

    • Amy Mckeever
  4. The first of the eleven roll call votes to result in a rejection of a nomination was the December 15, 1795 vote on the nomination of John Rutledge for chief justice, and the most recent time was the October 23, 1987 vote on the nomination of Robert Bork.

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  6. Jan 5, 2006 · Table 1 of this report lists and describes actions taken by the Senate, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the President on all Supreme Court nominations, from 1789 through 2020. The table provides the name of each person nominated to the Court and the name of the President making the nomination.

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