Nominated by President
George W. Bush, John G. Roberts, Jr. was confirmed as Chief Justice of the United States on 29 September 2005. At the time of his nomination, Roberts was a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals (D.C. Circuit), a position which he assumed in 2003 after also being nominated by President Bush. According to the
Washington Post, Roberts "has long been considered one of the Republicans' heavyweights amid the largely Democratic Washington legal establishment." He served as a legal aide in the administration of
Ronald Reagan, in private practice at the firm of Hogan & Hartson, and was deputy solicitor general in the administration of
George Bush the elder from 1989-93. He earned an undergraduate degree from Harvard in 1976, and a degree from Harvard Law School in 1979, after which he clerked for Supreme Court justice (later Chief Justice)
William Rehnquist. It was Rehnquist's death on 3 September 2005 which opened the position of Chief Justice to which Roberts was nominated (5 September). Roberts had earlier been nominated by Bush to fill the seat vacated by retiring associate justice
Sandra Day O'Connor, but with Rehnquist's death, Bush shifted the nomination to fill Rehnquist's seat instead.
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