As election looms, Biden struggles to match Trump's judicial
appointments
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[December 26, 2023]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - The White House is gearing up for what could be President
Joe Biden's last chance to put his stamp on the judiciary, as
progressive advocates fret that he may fall short of appointing as many
judges as former President Donald Trump did over his four-year term.
With a November 2024 election rematch between Biden and his Republican
predecessor looking increasingly likely, Senate Democrats are pledging
to remain focused on confirming Biden's judicial nominees in 2024 and
adding to the 166 already approved to sit on the bench.
After two years of matching or exceeding Trump's pace of judicial
appointments, Biden's rate compared to his predecessor's slowed in 2023,
as Senate Republicans wielded their influence and forced the White House
to bargain with them over potential nominees.
Russ Feingold, a Democratic former U.S. senator and leader of the
liberal American Constitution Society, said that slower pace has put
Biden's ability to continue to appoint diverse judges to the bench at
risk as an election looms that will decide whether he gets a second term
and Democrats retain control of the Senate.
"Now we're looking at a situation where if either the presidency
switches or the Senate switches, most of this progress probably will be
stopped or greatly stifled," he said.
WHY IT MATTERS
Biden throughout his tenure has sought to fulfill a 2020 campaign pledge
to bring greater diversity to the judiciary, whose judges have
disproportionately been white men and have usually been ex-prosecutors
or former law firm partners.
Two-thirds of Biden's confirmed nominees are people of color, and 108
have been women, according to the Leadership Conference on Civil and
Human Rights.
He has frequently nominated civil rights lawyers and public defenders to
the bench, as Democrats aim to counterbalance the conservative influence
of Trump's 234 judicial appointees.
Prominent confirmed judges in 2023 included Julie Rikelman, a former
abortion rights attorney now on the Boston-based 1st U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals, and Dale Ho, a voting rights advocate now serving as a
federal judge in Manhattan.
"All year long, this Senate majority has prioritized confirming judges
who add to the bench's personal and professional diversity, and we're
going to continue going into the new year," Senate Majority Leader Chuck
Schumer said on the Senate floor on Dec. 11.
But while the Senate confirmed 69 judges in 2023, that number fell below
the pace of confirmations during Trump's third year, when 102 were
confirmed.
For several months, the Senate Judiciary Committee struggled to process
nominees amid the absence of an ailing panel member, Democratic Senator
Dianne Feinstein, who died in September.
[to top of second column]
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Julie Rikelman, an abortion rights lawyer who represented the
Mississippi clinic at the heart of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision
to overturn it's landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, testifies
before a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on her nomination to
become a federal appeals court judge for the First Circuit, on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., September 21, 2022. REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein/File Photo
WHAT IT MEANS FOR 2024
Biden could make up for that slow down in 2024. He has announced 30
other nominees who have yet to be confirmed. There are 53 current
vacancies on the federal bench awaiting a nominee, and more
vacancies are expected.
So, he could, in theory at least, still match Trump's four-year
total.
But 22 of the vacancies are in states with one or two Republican
senators, who thanks to a Senate custom known as the "blue slip"
have the ability to effectively veto nominees from their states they
do not approve of and hold seats open for a potential Republican
president.
"There's plenty of vacancies, but will he be able to nominate in red
states?," said Russell Wheeler, a visiting fellow at the Brookings
Institution who tracks judicial nominations. "That's the big
question."
Progressive groups have urged Senator Dick Durbin, the Judiciary
Committee's current Democratic chairman from Illinois, to abandon
the "blue slip" custom, which they say has hindered Biden's ability
to appoint judges in conservative-leaning states and much of the
South.
Leah Litman, a University of Michigan Law School professor who
co-hosts the liberal legal podcast "Strict Scrutiny," said Biden's
inability to nominate judges in those states will ensure Republican
lawmakers can "do whatever it is they want" without concern courts
will block laws they enact.
"We have seen the effect that Republican blockades for district
courts has had," she said.
She pointed to Texas, where Trump was able to fill multiple
vacancies with conservative judges who have often been sympathetic
to challenges to Biden policies. One, U.S. District Judge Matthew
Kacsmaryk in Amarillo, suspended approval of the abortion pill
mifepristone. It remains available pending U.S. Supreme Court
review.
Durbin has acknowledged "some judicial vacancies in states with
Republican senators have languished for months on end," but he has
stood by the tradition and encouraged Republicans to demonstrate
they can compromise with the White House.
The White House in recent months has pointed to successes on that
front, with district court judges confirmed in 2023 from Indiana,
Idaho and Louisiana and recent nominees pending from Florida, South
Carolina and Texas.
Biden closed out 2023 with an announcement that he intended to soon
nominate five new judges in states with Republican senators,
including two in Texas who have the support of Senators John Cornyn
and Ted Cruz.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi
and Alistair Bell)
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