Biden's ability to reshape U.S. judiciary hangs in balance as election
looms
Send a link to a friend
[November 04, 2022]
By Nate Raymond and Disha Raychaudhuri
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe
Biden's judicial nominees appear nowhere on the ballot in Tuesday's U.S.
midterm elections but his ability to keep reshaping the federal
judiciary hinges on the results of the voting that will determine
whether his fellow Democrats keep control of the Senate.
The Senate has the authority to confirm a president's nominees to the
federal judiciary including the Supreme Court. Biden's Republican
predecessor Donald Trump put a major emphasis on getting judicial
nominations confirmed as he worked to move the judiciary rightward.
Biden, aiming to nudge the judiciary back leftward and make it more
reflective of America's diversity, has managed to match Trump in the
number of such nominees confirmed - 84 - at the same point in their
presidencies.
His appointees include Ketanji Brown Jackson, the Supreme Court's first
Black woman justice. Among Biden's confirmed appointees, 75% are women,
25% are Black and 17% are Hispanic - a greater degree of diversity than
any of his predecessors achieved in a judiciary long dominated by white
men.
"It will go down as one of the great achievements of the Biden
administration," said Russ Feingold, a Democratic former U.S. senator
and leader of the liberal American Constitution Society, which has
advocated for Biden's judicial nominees.
Democrats control the Senate by the slimmest possible margin and
Republicans are aiming to erase that on Tuesday. If Democrats retain
control, Biden has a chance to match or surpass Trump's mark of having
234 judicial nominees confirmed over four years.
If Republicans take over the Senate - with Senator Mitch McConnell in
line to return as majority leader - they could slow the confirmation
process to a crawl. McConnell did just that during Democratic former
President Barack Obama's tenure.
"For the last two years, the Democrat-run Senate has been more of a
rubber stamp than an equal partner on judicial nominations," McConnell
said in a statement to Reuters provided by his office. "I expect that to
change if Republicans are in the majority next year."
During the last two years of Obama's presidency, McConnell blocked
consideration of a Supreme Court nominee - an action with little
precedent in U.S. history that enabled Trump instead to fill a vacancy -
and allowed votes on just two appellate court nominees.
If Republicans secure a Senate majority in the election, they would not
actually take control until January. That means Democrats could make a
mad dash until then to confirm as many as possible of the 57 remaining
nominees Biden has sent the Senate, 25 of whom already have advanced
through the Senate Judiciary Committee and are awaiting action by the
full chamber.
Among those awaiting confirmation is Julie Rikelman, a Biden nominee to
the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals who was the lawyer
who argued unsuccessfully to preserve abortion rights in the Supreme
Court case that overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade landmark that had
legalized the proceed nationwide. Another is Dale Ho, an American Civil
Liberties Union voting-rights advocate who Biden nominated as a federal
district court judge in New York.
[to top of second column]
|
U.S. President Joe Biden speaks during a
campaign rally for the Democratic Party's senatorial candidate Val
Demings and gubernatorial candidate Charlie Crist, in Miami Gardens,
Florida, U.S. November 1, 2022. REUTERS/Marco Bello/File Photo
'LOOK LIKE AMERICA'
Biden's 2020 campaign website promised judicial nominees who "look
like America, are committed to the rule of law, understand the
importance of individual civil rights and civil liberties in a
democratic society."
He has called Senate confirmation of Jackson one of his proudest
days in office. Biden also has secured confirmation for 13 other
Black women to federal judgeships. Most recently, the Senate in
September confirmed Arianna Freeman as the first Black woman on the
Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Circuit courts
are the regional federal appellate courts one step below the Supreme
Court.
Eight of Biden's confirmed circuit court nominees, including
Freeman, worked in the past as public defenders representing
indigent criminal defendants - bringing a different perspective than
a former prosecutor, a more common background for judicial
appointees. That number represents a record for any president,
according to the liberal activist group Demand Justice.
With the risk of Democrats losing control of the Senate, liberal
groups have prodded Judiciary Committee Chairman Dick Durbin to
speed up the processing of nominees by holding more hearings and
allowing more than just the usual five or six to appear before the
panel every two weeks. Durbin has resisted.
A Democratic committee aide, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said changing procedures would risk provoking Republicans into
boycotting hearings and preventing the panel from having the quorum
needed to vote on nominees.
"President Biden and Senate Democrats have made it a priority to
elevate highly qualified judicial nominees - and we've done so at an
outstanding pace despite the unique constraints of an evenly divided
committee and the longest 50-50 Senate in history," Durbin said in a
statement to Reuters provided by his office.
Senator John Cornyn, a Republican Judiciary Committee member, said
in September that Senate control by his party would not stop Biden
from nominating judges but would give Republicans "more leverage to
negotiate" to head off nominees who are "ideologues."
"It will not be mindless obstruction, but it will be careful
consideration on a nominee-by-nominee basis to ensure they are
within the judicial mainstream and enjoy bipartisan support," said
Mike Davis, a former Republican Senate Judiciary Committee aide who
heads the Article III Project conservative activist group.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston and Disha Raychaudhuri in
Washington; Editing by Will Dunham and Alexia Garamfalvi)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |