Posted on 08/29/2018 12:58:19 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
A known solid conservative whom I will guess is about 36. Get her into a starter judgeship now and in less than a decade, if she continues to do well, she will be a prime candidate as a USSC nominee.
The simple fact is that such nominees are now widely considered to be viable only from their late 40s to early 50s, which makes many of them simply miss the correct age window because the Dems are in power or there is no opening. This is a bigger issue for the GOP than the Dems, because so many lawyers lean to the left, and especially for actually conservative, top GOP attorneys, who arent that plentiful.
Far better that we think flexibly enough to give our best candidates a wider window of viability so they can more likely make it to be a nominee. Already she has great experience in her clerkships and in the practice of law.
If Americans are eligible to be voted in as president at age 35, I think a top, experienced candidate above that age threshold is fine as a circuit judge.
We have a stupid system now when you have to be just the very “right” age, within a very narrow band, to get a USSC nomination. Politically smart to stretch it a bit to the younger, so you don’t lose the actuarial number of years out of an appointment, but also don’t end up on passing on so many of your best nominees because they don’t quite precisely fit that narrow age window.
Really? You wouldn’t hire a manager without at least 7 years experience? Then you’d likely be missing on a lot of top managerial talent, since they tend to get promoted onto that track much sooner than 7 years in.
Just out of curiosity, in what industry do you do this managerial hiring?
Except politically of course it does.
SCOTUS ASAP! Trump can do it in year 8 AFTER the court is stacked with CONFIRMED conservatives. That would insure she’s a long term squish.
But how can she achieve such poor anti-Constitutional and anti-American decisions being made by Federal court appointees at this moment? Hopefully, even a recent Constitution-faithful law grad (or a conservative FR poster) could do better.
For a department manager? Yeah three or four years in the field, three years as a supervisor...
And then to run a department? Seven years is not a lot of time.
Not sure where you work, but 7-10 years to a department manager is pretty normal.
He prefers judges that rule on their emotional connection with the case, no experience required. Beyond the emotional quotient, he would like to have a judge who relies on foreign law and Non-christian religions practices, and finally, a decision based on popular progressive fads.
He will likely to be disappointed with this nominee.
Field, supervisor—customer service? Manufacturing or utilities?
I am from the tech industry where the talent is very smart and if it also has the managing gene, it ripens faster than that!
Oh, and of course she already had 3 years of grad school, including no doubt internships and the like, before her 11 years of experience in practce and as a clerk to the very top. She is probably another. 5+ years from possible consideration to the high court.
Oh, and of course she already had 3 years of grad school, including no doubt internships and the like, before her 11 years of experience in practce and as a clerk to the very top. She is probably another. 5+ years from possible consideration to the high court.
Which “he” are you referring to?
Fancy that, a liberal writer making a comment that makes my day.
Started out in field engineering for broadband, then general operations, then big call centers. About 40 years from Supervisor to Manager to GM to VP, SVP and EVP.
The tech world may be organized for projects, but they are among some of the worst “people managers” in the world. They generally lack social skills and the ability to see grey areas.
But to each his own.
I find that new employees THINK they are qualified now in about four months, but they continually screw over their peers and subordinates because they either don’t know what they are doing, or they think the world is run like Big Brother.
Most of our problems started when we got this silly idea that the law was so complicated that only someone who studied for years could understand it.
The author leaves out the elephant in the room - judges serve for life. Trump is remaking the judiciary and his efforts will last for many many years.
Joe Patrice is a senior editor at Above the Law and co-host of Thinking Like A Lawyer. Feel free to email any tips, questions, or comments. Follow him on Twitter if youre interested in law, politics, and a healthy dose of college sports news.
Pleasant looking young woman. But that is a secondary consideration.
That’s why i say SCOTUS ASAP. Push the left’s button. Just make sure Ruth Buzzi, and 2 others are replaced. Give Thomas an early retirement and her the job.
She’s a cutie pie.
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