Biden to secure 200th judicial confirmation as election looms
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[May 22, 2024]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) - President Joe Biden is set to secure U.S. Senate
confirmation of his 200th appointment to the federal judiciary on
Wednesday, surpassing his Republican predecessor Donald Trump's pace
even as the clock ticks toward their Nov. 5 election rematch.
Reaching this milestone at this point in his presidency is evidence,
according to Biden's allies, that he may achieve a goal his fellow
Democrats not long ago fretted could be out of reach - matching Trump's
tally of 234 judges appointed to life-tenured positions on the federal
bench in four years in office.
Challenges in confirming judicial nominees in the Senate, where
Democrats hold a slim 51-49 majority, had left Biden behind Trump's pace
at the start of this year. In fact, Democratic Senator Dick Durbin, who
chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee that reviews such nominations, had
previously called reaching the 200 mark a year-end goal.
With Biden's tally at 199, the Senate has a vote scheduled for Wednesday
on confirming U.S. Magistrate Judge Angela Martinez as a district court
judge in Arizona.
One way Biden has managed to surpass Trump's pace has been to cut deals
with Republican senators to fill vacancies at the trial court level in
their home states. That means Biden has sometimes picked compromise,
moderate nominees rather than judges more to the left as he might
prefer.
Trump, with the Senate then controlled by Republicans, appointed the
second-highest number of judges on record in a single term in office,
behind only Jimmy Carter. Biden is nearing Trump's tally despite
inheriting less than half as many vacancies to fill when he took office
as Trump had.
Durbin said in an interview that Senate Democrats have "done better than
I expected" in confirming Biden's nominees and that reaching Trump's
tally is possible now, though hurdles remain.
"I'm going to keep pushing forward as long as we have good nominees that
I can send to the (Senate) floor for consideration," Durbin said.
BEYOND THE NUMBERS
Trump succeeded in moving the federal judiciary rightward, including
giving the U.S. Supreme Court a 6-3 conservative majority, up from an
evenly split 4-4 when he took office. Trump named three conservative
justices to the top U.S. judicial body: Neil Gorsuch in 2017 to fill a
vacancy that Senate Republicans had refused let Democratic President
Barack Obama fill in 2016; Brett Kavanaugh in 2018; and Amy Coney
Barrett in 2020.
The Supreme Court since then has delivered rulings cheered by
conservatives including overturning abortion rights, widening gun rights
and limiting the power of U.S. regulatory agencies.
Biden has made a single appointment to the Supreme Court: liberal
appellate judge Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022, the first Black woman to
serve as a justice. All told, Biden has appointed 23% of the 874 federal
judges as he edges the judiciary back in a more leftward direction.
"That's a significant change considering the kinds of nominees that have
been put on the bench," Durbin said.
Trump's outsized influence on the judiciary included his appointment of
54 judges to the 13 federal appellate courts that are a step below the
Supreme Court. Biden has made 41 such appointments.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on Judge Ketanji Brown
Jackson?s confirmation as the first Black woman to serve on the U.S.
Supreme Court, as she stands at his side during a celebration event
on the South Lawn at the White House in Washington, U.S., April 8,
2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
Durbin also praised the diversity that Biden has brought to the
bench. Two-thirds of his appointees are women, and about the same
proportion are Black, Hispanic or other racial minorities.
'RUN THE TABLE'
Thomas Jipping, a senior legal fellow at the conservative
Heritage Foundation think tank, said Biden's six predecessors dating
to 1981 averaged about 30 confirmed judges between this point in the
final year of a presidential term and Dec. 1 of that year, making it
unlikely Biden can reach the 235 needed to surpass Trump.
"You'd have to run the table," Jipping said.
Biden has 25 pending nominees. The Judiciary Committee's calendar
has enough hearings scheduled for it to process enough nominees and
send them to the Senate floor for confirmation votes to enable him
to eclipse Trump.
But nominations can easily stall in a Senate so closely split.
Biden's pick to become the first Muslim federal appeals court judge,
Adeel Mangi, faces an uncertain path to joining the
Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals after three
Democrats said they would vote with Republicans against him.
Senate Democrats have successfully secured confirmation of other
contentious nominations such Nicole Berner, a top union lawyer who
formerly worked at abortion provider Planned Parenthood. The Senate
confirmed Berner in March to the Richmond, Virginia-based 4th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals.
The White House has cut deals with Republican U.S. senators in
states like Florida, Indiana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas and
Wyoming to move forward on nominations for trial judge positions in
those states. There is a Senate custom that nominees for such
judgeships receive a "blue slip" - an informal endorsement - from
their home-state senators, regardless of party.
"There is not a single day where I am not interfacing with some
Republican office," Phil Brest, the White House senior counsel in
charge of nominations, said in an interview.
George Washington University law professor John Collins, who studies
judicial nominations, said Republican senators are more likely to
sign off on candidates who are older, former prosecutors or worked
in corporate defense. But such compromises mean that Biden can fill
positions now rather than risk Republicans regaining Senate control
in the November election or Trump regaining the presidency.
The White House goal now, Collins said, is to "avoid more extreme
outcomes in the future."
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi
and Will Dunham)
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