Judicial Nominees

  • August 12, 2011

    The press continues to take note of the alarming number of federal court vacancies, with nominees left unconfirmed at the beginning of Congress’s month-long August recess. Articles published by The New York Times, NPR, Politico, Roll Call, The Wall Street Journal Law Blog, and The New York Times Magazine, among others, highlight this vacancy crisis. In The Atlantic, Andrew Cohen points to the Senate’s failure to confirm judicial nominees as an “example of the gross negligence of the legislative branch.” Ari Melber from The Nation appeared on MSNBC’s “The Dylan Ratigen Show” to discuss judicial vacancies. The Washington Post’s Adam Serwer warns, “It’s not just that Obama has the lowest judicial confirmation rate of any president in the last forty years, or that many of the more than one hundred vacancies have been classified as judicial emergencies. It’s that of the judges Obama has confirmed, few of them are young, which means that they’ll need to be replaced sooner rather than later.”

  • August 5, 2011

    In the final hours before the Senate left Washington for the August recess, the Senate confirmed four of the 24 judicial nominees ready for Senate review, and scheduled a vote for a fifth nominee upon their return in September. After the vote, American Constitution Society Executive Director Caroline Fredrickson lamented the Senate’s limited progress in getting judges confirmed, calling upon Senators to make “extraordinary efforts to expedite the pace of confirmations” with their return next month. In a statement, Senate Judicial Chairman Patrick Leahy said of this crisis, “It is not accurate to pretend that real progress is being made in these circumstances. Vacancies are being kept high, consensus nominees are being delayed and it is the American people and the Federal courts that are being made to suffer.”

    President Obama made two new judicial nominations this week: U.S. District Court Judge Adalberto José Jordán was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, and litigator Miranda Du was nominated to the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada. There are now 56 judicial nominees awaiting confirmation.

    The judicial vacancy crisis received even more attention this week with an NPR segment on President Obama’s diverse judicial nominees, featuring Fredrickson. "Obama is nominating many more diverse nominees than his predecessors ... strikingly so," Fredrickson told NPR. "But the nominees are not getting confirmed with the same kind of success."

  • July 29, 2011

    by Amanda Lynch

    Pressure is mounting on the Senate to confirm judicial nominees before the scheduled recess next Friday. Chief Judge Federico A. Moreno of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida wrote letters to Sens. Harry Reid and Mitch McConnell asking for swift confirmation of his district’s nominations, Kathleen Williams and Robert Scola.

    ABA President Stephen Zack also addressed a letter to Sens. Reid and McConnell encouraging them to accelerate the pace of confirmations, beginning with immediate up-or-down votes for the 21 nominees unanimously reported out of the Judiciary Committee.

    An editorial in the San Antonio Express-News urged swift confirmation of Texas nominees, who are needed to deal with the “mounting number of criminal cases related to border issues, including drug and human trafficking.”There are currently seven vacancies on the Texas district courts, all of which have been deemed judicial emergencies, and there is a measure pending before congress that would create three new federal courts in that state to deal with the overwhelming caseload.

    Also this week,the Senate unanimously confirmed two judicial nominees, Paul A. Engelmayer to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, and Ramona Villagomez Manglona to the District Court for the Mariana Islands.

  • June 24, 2011

    The Senate confirmed Perkins Coie partner Michael H. Simon to the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon by a vote of 64 to 35. Simon was originally nominated by President Obama almost a year ago, and had been twice approved by the Judiciary Committee, but the Senate delayed a vote on his nomination despite the declaration of a judicial emergency in Oregon.

    During a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Judge Christopher F. Droney’s nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the nominee was “warmly received by Senators of both parties,” according to The Hartford Courant. The newspaper notes that Droney’s experience was “remarkably different” from that of President Obama’s two other nominees to this circuit. One, Robert Chatigny, was forced to withdraw his nomination after faced significant Republican opposition, and the other, Susan Carney, was confirmed “after several false starts.” The Judiciary Committee also held hearings on four district court nominees: Robert D. Mariani for the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, Cathy Bissoon for the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, Mark R. Hornak for the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, and Robert N. Scola, Jr. for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The Committee again delayed a vote on former Kansas Attorney General Steve Six’s nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.

  • March 11, 2011

    This week was marked by both some limited movement on the judicial nominations front and increased attention to the crisis created by the many lingering vacancies. The Senate unanimously confirmed four judicial nominees to federal district court seats, including two to the Central District of Illinois where the debilitating strain of three vacancies was documented in a Washington Post front-page story. The Senate Judiciary Committee approved six nominees, including former New York Solicitor General Caitlin Joan Halligan, and President Obama made two more judicial nominations: Steve Six, former Kansas Attorney General, for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, and commercial litigator William Francis Kuntz, II, for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York.