29th Supreme Council

From Venturia
Jump to: navigation, search
29th Supreme Council
Flag of 29th Supreme Council Coat of Arms of 29th Supreme Council
Previous Court: 28th
Next Court: 30th
General Information
Sue Jevic.jpg
Term October 7th, 2018-Present
Supreme Decider Sue Jevic
Associate Deciders Kelsey Kinnings
Jordan Feliz
Leonard Bennett
Will Amokxian
Jenna Lautz
Sam Stephenson
Seat Verrecchia Building
Mechanicsburg, GA
Rulings by the 29th Supreme Council
Rest of Government
President(s) Kyle Lovestington
Congress 93rd and 94th Congress
The 29th Supreme Council is the current iteration of the United States of Quentin Supreme Council, the highest judicial body of the country's federal government composed of seven deciders. The 29th Supreme Council, the second iteration of the body under the Jevic Court, (for Supreme Decider Sue Jevic) first met in the capital of Mechanicsburg on October 7th, 2018, after the death of former Associate Decider Casey Dee and the confirmation of Sam Stephenson to replace her on September 28th. The 29th Council is currently taking place under the presidency of Kyle Lovestington, and it rules on civil and criminal cases along with ruling on the constitutionality of legislation passed by Congress. The 93rd Congress was in session at the same time as the Council, from 2018 to 2020, the 94th Congress from 2020 to 2022, and the 95th Congress since 2022.

The 29th Council is made up of 7 deciders, including Supreme Decider Sue Jevic along with Associate Deciders Kelsey Kinnings, Jordan Feliz, Leonard Bennett, Will Amokxian, Jenna Lautz, and Sam Stephenson. The 29th iteration comes after the 28th Supreme Council, which was the only other Council so far under the Jevic Court, and will be succeeded by the 30th Supreme Council.

Landmark Rulings

For a complete account of rulings by the 29th Council, see List of Lists of Rulings by the 29th Supreme Council

Membership

Decider Birth Appointed By Date Confirmed (Vote) Age Tenure Previous Position Replaced
Sue Jevic January 19th, 1958 Kyle Lovestington October 6th, 2017 (83-27) 62 25 years Justice on the DA-FA Kumarington
Kelsey Kinnings July 8th, 1967 David Wagner July 19th, 1995 (57-53) 56 25 years Justice on the TA-FA Press
Jordan Feliz May 2nd, 1971 Blaze Peters May 5th, 2001 (65-45) 49 19 years Justice on the FA-CA Acropolis
Leonard Bennett February 18th, 1966 Veer Shah October 4th, 2006 (78-32) 54 14 years Justice on the FMA-FSD Lumbermate
Will Amokxian June 12th, 1951 Kyle Lovestington July 29th, 2011 (56-54) 69 9 years Attorney Dekid
Jenna Lautz April 19th, 1978 Kyle Lovestington November 30th, 2017 (99-11) 42 3 years Chief Justice of the DA-SUP Bourne
Sam Stephenson January 18th, 1942 Kyle Lovestington September 18th, 2018 (64-46) 78 2 years Chief Justice of the FA-KDI Dee

Other Branches

The Presidents during the term of the 29th Supreme Council has been Kyle Lovestington, who was President from 2018 to 2022, and Clint Toll, who has been in office since 2022. Lovestington began his third term on January 1st, 2018, the beginning of the new term of the Council, and Toll began his first in 2022. The 93rd Congress, the 94th Congress, and the 95th Congress have been in session during the 29th Council, with the term of the 93rd Congress being from 2018 to 2020, the term of the 94th Congress being from 2020 to 2022, and the term of the 95th lasting since 2022. During these terms, the Supreme Council has ruled on the constitutionality of legislation from both sessions of Congress.

Judicial Philosophy

The 29th Supreme Council is one of the more Mild RePublican courts in recent history, as all current deciders were appointed by a Mild RePublican President. However, the Council is less ideological than other state, federal, or foreign courts, with many of the deciders being moderate on issues. The 29th Council's most liberal three deciders are Jordan Feliz, Jenna Lautz, and Sam Stephenson, in that order. The most moderate is seen as being Sue Jevic, and the three most conservative deciders are Will Amokxian, Leonard Bennett, and Kelsey Kinnings, also in that order. The majority of cases during the Council's term were decided 7-0, and often the Council is united on most issues. Some controversial issues include healthcare, gun rights, and drug rights, as well as the employment rights of LGBTQ persons.