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Supreme Court of Virginia Chief Justice vacancy (January 2026)

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Virginia Supreme Court
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Goodwyn vacancy
Date:
January 1, 2026
Status:
Retirement scheduled
Nomination
Nominee:
To be determined
Date:
To be determined

Supreme Court of Virginia Chief Justice Bernard Goodwyn is retiring on January 1, 2026. Goodwyn's replacement will be appointed by the Virginia State Legislature.

In Virginia, state supreme court justices are selected through direct legislative appointment. Justices are appointed directly by the state legislature. There are two states that use this selection method. To read more about the legislative appointment of judges, click here.

When the General Assembly is in session, midterm vacancies are filled by the same legislative selection process normally used to select judges. When the assembly is not in session, the governor appoints a replacement to serve until 30 days after the start of the next session, by which point a judge must be elected to the seat.[1][2]

Ballotpedia has compiled the following resources on the process to fill the Supreme Court of Virginia vacancy:


Appointee candidates and nominations

Ballotpedia will post information on candidates and prospective appointees as information becomes available. If you know of information that should be included here, please email us.

The selection process

See also: Judicial selection in Virginia

In Virginia, state supreme court justices are selected through direct legislative appointment. Justices are appointed directly by the state legislature. There are two states that use this selection method. To read more about the legislative appointment of judges, click here.

Makeup of the court

See also: Supreme Court of Virginia

Justices

Following Goodwyn's retirement, the Supreme Court of Virginia included the following members:

Teresa M. Chafin Appointed by the Virginia General Assembly in 2019
D. Arthur Kelsey Appointed by the Virginia General Assembly in 2015
Thomas P. Mann Appointed by the Virginia General Assembly in 2022
Stephen R. McCullough Appointed by the Virginia General Assembly in 2016
Cleo Powell Appointed by the Virginia General Assembly in 2011
Wesley G. Russell Jr. Appointed by the Virginia General Assembly in 2022

About the court

Supreme Court of Virginia
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Court Information
Justices: 7
Founded: 1776
Location: Richmond, Virginia
Salary
Associates: $243,842[3]
Judicial Selection
Method: Direct legislative appointment
Term: 12 years
Active justices
Teresa M. Chafin, S. Bernard Goodwyn, D. Arthur Kelsey, Thomas P. Mann, Stephen R. McCullough, Cleo Powell, Wesley G. Russell Jr.


Founded in 1776, the Virginia Supreme Court is the state's court of last resort and has seven judgeships. The current chief of the court is Bernard Goodwyn. In 2018, the court decided 1,697 cases.

As of August 2022, one judge on the court was appointed by a Democratic governor and six were appointed by the General Assembly. Bernard Goodwyn was appointed to a pro tempore term by Tim Kaine before the legislature confirmed him to a full term.

The court is located in Richmond, Virginia directly across the street from the Virginia Capitol building.[4]

In Virginia, state supreme court justices are selected through direct legislative appointment. Justices are appointed directly by the state legislature. There are two states that use this selection method. To read more about the legislative appointment of judges, click here.


About Chief Justice Goodwyn

See also: Bernard Goodwyn
Bernard Goodwyn.jpg

Goodwyn received a bachelor's degree from Harvard University and his J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law in 1986.[5] Goodwyn was a partner with Willcox and Savage from 1992 to 1995, and a research associate professor at the University of Virginia School of Law from 1994 to 1995. In 1995, he was elected Virginia State Official Judge of the General District Court. Two years later, he was elected Virginia State Official Judge of the First Circuit Court. In 2007, Goodwyn was appointed to the Virginia Supreme Court.[5]

Other state supreme court appointments in 2026

See also: State supreme court vacancies, 2026

The following table lists vacancies on state supreme courts that opened in 2026. Click the link under the Court column for a particular vacancy for more information on that vacancy.

Click here for vacancies that opened in 2025.


See also

Virginia Judicial Selection More Courts
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Courts in Virginia
Virginia Court of Appeals
Virginia Supreme Court
Elections: 202520242023202220212020201920182017
Gubernatorial appointments
Judicial selection in Virginia
Federal courts
State courts
Local courts

External links

Footnotes