Judgeship in a sentence as a noun

* Appointing Jeff Sessions, who had been denied a judgeship due to his racist beliefs.

But remember, Jeff Sessions was denied a federal judgeship in 1986 with the reason being, "He was too racist".

If that's the case, technical education should become a part of judgeship, if it's not already.

Carmen thinks big convictions will get her a federal judgeship or other appointment.

I wish some judges would simply refuse to impose them when they are obviously unjust, even at the cost of their judgeships.

With such a high bail it appears this particular judgeship was granted erroneously.

So when a judgeship opens up, a lot of very good, well educated lawyers apply, and the committee has its pick of the litter.

Well... Congress has passed laws impacting venue decisions, and Congress can change the composition of the courts, for instance by adding new judgeships.

Turnover in judgeships occurs when older judges retire or leave the bench to go into the private arbitration world, which can be very lucrative.

If there are judges out there that very few of one side or the other is willing to agree to, those judges should be reviewed for making biased decisions and be at risk of losing their judgeship.

And unlike many other civil service jobs, a judgeship is a capstone to a career so it's not like judges use the judgeship as a stepping-stone to a lucrative private-sector position.

They're appointed by, say, a mayor, or a governor - if they do a "good" job of prosecuting brutality, are they going to get a further appointment to a judgeship, or get enough support from the police union to pursue an elected office?

Consequently, she already faced an uphill battle in ever being seriously considered for a judgeship, and she had essentially no chance of receiving a recommendation from the ABA judicial candidate evaluation committee.

Judgeship definitions

noun

the position of judge

See also: judicature