Daniel Will (New Hampshire)

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Daniel Will
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New Hampshire Supreme Court
Tenure
2026 - Present
Term ends
2037
Years in position
0
Predecessor: Anna Barbara Hantz Marconi (Nonpartisan)
Elections and appointments
Appointed
January 27, 2026

Daniel Will is a judge of the New Hampshire Supreme Court. Will assumed office on March 4, 2026. Will's current term ends on February 11, 2037.

Will first became a member of the New Hampshire Supreme Court through an appointment. Governor of New Hampshire Kelly Ayotte first appointed him to the court in 2026 to the seat vacated by Anna Barbara Hantz Marconi. To learn more about this appointment, click here.

Appointments

New Hampshire Supreme Judicial Court (2026-present)

See also: New Hampshire Supreme Court justice vacancy (February 2026)

On January 27, 2026, Governor Kelly Ayotte (R) nominated Daniel Will to the New Hampshire Supreme Court, replacing Justice Anna Barbara Hantz Marconi, who retired on February 12, 2026.[1] Marconi retired after reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70.[2] Will is Gov. Ayotte's second nominee to the five-member supreme court.

In New Hampshire, state supreme court justices are selected through direct gubernatorial appointment. Justices are appointed directly by the governor without the use of a nominating commission.[3] There are five states that use this selection method. To read more about the gubernatorial appointment of judges, click here.

Vacancies on the court are filled through gubernatorial appointment. A judicial selection commission recommends candidates to the governor, the governor selects a candidate, and the candidate must be confirmed by the Executive Council.[4]

State supreme court judicial selection in New Hampshire

See also: Judicial selection in New Hampshire

The five justices on the New Hampshire Supreme Court are selected by gubernatorial appointment. The governor's nominee must be confirmed by the New Hampshire Executive Council.[5][6] The five members of the executive council are chosen every two years in partisan elections.[7] As of April 2023, it had been customary since 2000 for the governor to establish a judicial selection commission by executive order to seek out, evaluate, and recommend candidates for nomination.[8][9]

Justices may serve on the court until they reach the mandatory retirement age of 70.[10]

Qualifications

State law does not stipulate any particular qualifications for appointment to the supreme court.[4]

Chief justice

The chief justice of the supreme court is selected by gubernatorial appointment. The position of chief justice is a specific seat on the court rather than a temporary leadership position.[11][4]

Vacancies

See also: How vacancies are filled in state supreme courts

Vacancies on the court are filled through gubernatorial appointment. A judicial selection commission recommends candidates to the governor, the governor selects a candidate, and the candidate must be confirmed by the Executive Council.[4] The map below highlights how vacancies are filled in state supreme courts across the country.



See also

New Hampshire Judicial Selection More Courts
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Courts in New Hampshire
New Hampshire Supreme Court
Elections: 20132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202420252026
Gubernatorial Appointments
Judicial Selection in New Hampshire
Federal Courts
Other State Courts
Local Courts

External links

Footnotes

Political offices
Preceded by
Anna Barbara Hantz Marconi
New Hampshire Supreme Court
2026-Present
Succeeded by
-