House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky
after Biden veto threat
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[December 13, 2024]
By KEVIN FREKING
WASHINGTON (AP) — What was once a bipartisan effort to expand by 66 the
number of federal district judgeships across the country passed the
House of Representatives on Thursday, though prospects for becoming law
are murky after Republicans opted to bring the measure to the floor only
after President-elect Donald Trump had won a second term.
The legislation spreads out the establishment of the new trial court
judgeships over more than a decade to give three presidential
administrations and six Congresses the chance to appoint the new judges.
It was carefully designed so that lawmakers would not knowingly give an
advantage to either political party when it comes to shaping the federal
judiciary.
The Senate passed the measure unanimously in August, but the
Republican-led House brought it to the floor only after the election
results were known. The bill passed by a vote of 236-173 Thursday with
the vast majority of Democrats opposed.
The White House said Tuesday that if President Joe Biden were presented
with the bill, he would veto it. That likely dooms the bill this
Congress, as overruling him would require a two-thirds majority in both
the House and Senate. The House vote Thursday fell well short of that.
Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the sponsor of the House version of the
bill, apologized to colleagues “for the hour we're taking for something
we should have done before the mid-term elections.”
“But we are where we are,” Issa said, warning that failure to pass the
legislation would lead to a greater case backlog that he said is already
costing American businesses billions of dollars and forcing prosecutors
to take more plea agreements from criminal defendants.
“It would only be pettiness today if we were not to do this because of
who got to be first,” Issa said.
But Democrats said the agreement central to the bill was broken by GOP
leaders because they opted not to bring it up for a vote before the
election.
“Unfortunately, we are back where we have always been every time a bill
to create new judgeships comes before Congress — with one party seeking
a tactical advantage over the other,” said Rep. Jerry Nadler, the lead
Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee.
Organizations representing judges and attorneys urged Congress to vote
yes, regardless of the timing of congressional action. They said that a
lack of new federal judgeships has contributed to profound delays in the
resolution of cases and serious concerns about access to justice.
"Failure to enact the JUDGES Act will condemn our judicial system to
more years of unnecessary delays and will deprive parties in the most
impacted districts from obtaining appropriate justice and timely relief
under the rule of law,” the presidents of the Federal Judges Association
and Federal Bar Association said in a joint statement issued before the
vote.
The change of heart from some Democrats and the new urgency from House
Republicans for considering it underscored the contentious politics that
surrounds federal judicial vacancies.
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Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., is pictured before a hearing, Nov. 7,
2023, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)
Senate roll-call votes are required for almost every judicial
nominee these days, and most votes for the Supreme Court and
appellate courts are now decided largely along party lines.
Lawmakers are generally hesitant to hand presidents from the
opposing party new opportunities to shape the judiciary.
Nadler said the bill would give Trump 25 judicial nominations on top
of the 100-plus spots that are expected to open up over the next
four years. He said that Trump used his first term to stack the
courts with “dangerously unqualified and ideological appointees.”
“Giving him more power to appoint additional judges would be
irresponsible,” Nadler said.
Nadler said he’s willing to take up comparable legislation in the
years ahead and give the additional judicial appointments to
“unknown presidents yet to come,” but until then, he was urging
colleagues to vote against the bill.
Rep. Troy Nehls, R-Texas, said the bill would create 10 new judges
in his state and authorize additional courtroom locations to improve
access for rural residents. He said it would reduce case backlogs
and ensure the administration of justice in a reasonable time frame.
“Make no mistake folks, the sudden opposition to this bill from my
friends on the other side of the aisle is nothing more than childish
foot-stomping,” Nehls said.
Speaker Mike Johnson said Democrats were “standing in the way of
progress, simply because of partisan politics.”
“This should not be a political issue,” Johnson said. "It should be
about prioritizing the needs of the American people and ensuring the
courts are able to deliver fair, impartial and timely justice.”
But Sen. Dick Durbin, the Democratic chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, said he would not try to talk the president out
of vetoing the measure. He said acting on the bill made sense when
the outcome of the presidential election was unknown, but now it's
known, and “it's advantage Republicans.”
“The consequence of it is we missed our opportunity,” Durbin said.
Congress last authorized a new district judgeship more than 20 years
ago, while the number of cases being filed continues to increase
with litigants often waiting years for a resolution.
Last year, the policy-making body for the federal court system, the
Judicial Conference of the United States, recommended the creation
of several new district and court of appeals judgeships to meet
increased workload demands in certain courts.
But in its veto threat earlier this week, the White House Office of
Management and Budget said the legislation would create new
judgeships in states where senators have sought to hold open
existing judicial vacancies.
“These efforts to hold open vacancies suggest that concerns about
judicial economy and caseload are not the true motivating force
behind passage of the law,” the White House said.
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