Harry Reid

  • March 12, 2012

    by Nicole Flatow

    Ramping up his aggressive push to fill long-vacant seats on the federal courts, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid took the extraordinary measure Monday of filing motions to force votes on all 17 district court nominees pending on the Senate floor.

    “Republicans have refused to allow us to even vote - won't even allow us to vote - on these qualified judicial nominees,” Reid said. “Republicans have prevented the Senate from doing its constitutional duty and that's what it is.”

    Motions to invoke cloture have historically been considered extraordinary even when filed one at a time. But the filing of 17 cloture petitions on district court nominees is an unprecedented measure, taken to clear some of the 83 vacancies that continue to plague the federal trial courts.

    “Unfortunately, Republicans have forced our hand,” Reid said. “What else can we do?”

    All 17 of these nominees would fill seats on the federal trial courts, and half of those seats are considered judicial emergencies.

  • February 17, 2012

    by Nicole Flatow

    With the election year underway and 103 current and future vacancies plaguing the federal courts, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is making headway in an aggressive push to force votes on long-pending judicial nominees.

    On Wednesday, he successfully pushed through the nomination of Adalberto Jose Jordán to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, even as Sen. Rand Paul forced the 30 hours of debate to elapse before the final vote to confirm Jordán 94-5.

    And on Thursday night, Reid was successful in securing confirmation of another nominee, Jesse Furman, to the Southern District of New York. Reid filed a motion to invoke cloture on his nomination Wednesday, but the Senate opted not to vote on the cloture motion, and to simply hold an up-or-down vote.

    Both Jordán and Furman are consensus nominees -- both were approved by the Judiciary Committee with absolutely no opposition, and both have been ripe for an immediate vote since before the Senate left for the winter recess.

    They are just two examples of the many highly qualified consensus nominees who have been pending for months on the Senate calendar.

  • May 13, 2009

    Roll Call reports:

    As Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) moves to ease a backlog of executive branch nominations, he suggested on Tuesday that he does not have the votes to bring up President Barack Obama's pick to run the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel.

    "Right now we're finding out when to do that," Reid said, responding to a question about the status of Indiana University law professor Dawn Johnsen's nomination to the Justice post. "We need a couple Republican votes until we can get to 60."

    According to the Washington Monthly, "this is just ridiculous." [Emphasis and links theirs.]

    Let's also take a moment to note that Johnsen is an exceptional nominee, who is unquestionably qualified, and clearly deserves confirmation.

    That said, what kind of show is Harry Reid running here? His caucus has 59 members, and Sen. Dick Lugar of Indiana, a conservative Republican, has already endorsed Johnsen's nomination. We have Democratic senators who won't even let the president's choice for the OLC get a vote because she's pro-choice?

    Firedoglake's Christy Hardin Smith is no less appalled