by Carl P. Leubsdorf
The controversial rulings in the Trump documents case by a Florida federal judge nominated by the former president — and the prospect that a Trump-dominated appeals court will consider any appeals — is a vivid reminder of the long reach of any president’s judicial appointments.
Trump-nominated judges have also been active in rejecting President Joe Biden’s actions on issues ranging from immigration to voting rights.
So it’s hardly surprising that Biden, a onetime Senate Judiciary Committee chair, has emphasized nominating federal judges, both to counter the ideological impact of the many Trump-selected conservative judges and to broaden the white male-dominated judiciary’s demographic makeup.
So far, the administration has succeeded – with the help of a narrow but disciplined Senate Democratic majority — in confirming through Monday a record number of federal judges for the first 20 months of any administration — one Supreme Court justice, 19 appeals judges and 57 district judges.
A majority are women, and many are minorities, a sharp contrast with Trump’s choice of mostly white men, though the judge in the Florida case, Colombian-born Aileen Mercedes Cannon, is both female and Hispanic.
However, the sheer scope of Biden’s effort — and the substantial number of pending vacancies — could encounter a time crunch as Senate leaders seek to overcome Republican delaying tactics amid concern that possible GOP Senate control next year could bring the effort to a virtual halt.
The narrow line that the president’s Senate allies are walking was illustrated Tuesday when two Democratic absences prevented confirmation of Arianna Freeman, who would be the first Black woman on the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals.
At present, 14 federal judicial nominations are pending on the Senate’s Executive Calendar, most for several months. Four others will first require a formal Senate vote to put them on the calendar because of tied votes in the panel of 11 Democrats and 11 Republicans.
One is Nancy Abudu, an African American who is deputy legal director of the Southern Poverty Law Center. Her nomination for the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals is opposed by Republicans because of the civil rights organization’s criticism of conservative groups. Six of the 11 active judges on that court, which would hear any appeal from Judge Cannon’s ruling, are Trump nominees.
Those 18 awaiting Senate action are a small proportion of the pending nominees. In addition, Biden has yet to make nominations for many other current vacancies — plus prospective vacancies where sitting judges have announced retirement plans, some so a fellow Democrat can succeed them. Plus, there 54 current or prospective vacancies at various levels with no nominees so far.
Some delays likely stem from disagreements between Republican senators and the Democratic White House over prospective nominees. In Texas, the White House sought to bypass the two Republican senators by announcing that Dallas Democratic Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson would handle judicial nominations.
But two vacancies remain — in the state’s Southern and Western Districts. Recently, GOP Sens. John Cornyn and Ted Cruz, who both sit on the Judiciary Committee, announced they were taking applications for them. The state also has prospective vacancies in the Southern and Western Districts, where two judges announced 2023 retirement plans.
Meanwhile, progressive Democratic groups have complained about the confirmation pace. Because of the 50-50 Senate, however, Judiciary Committee procedures require acquiescence of both parties. Aides say it is following the pattern of past Republican and Democratic Senate majorities — holding hearings on judicial nominations every other week.
But there have been unexpected delays. The consideration of Ketanji Brown Jackson’s Supreme Court nomination took several weeks. On occasion, committee sources say, late decisions on nominees by GOP senators limited the number being considered.
With just weeks before the Senate recesses for the Nov. 8 midterm elections, judicial nominations are fighting for time on the schedule against such other major measures as the appropriations legislation to fund the government past Sept. 30 and a proposal to codify the legality of same sex marriages.
Inevitably, it appears, judicial confirmations will become a major item in the Senate’s post-election lame-duck session, not an unusual situation. Judge Cannon was among 13 Trump nominees confirmed after his 2020 election defeat.
Filling judgeships then will become even more urgent if Republicans capture the Senate. GOP leaders have already signaled they would slow down or halt confirming Biden’s judicial nominees, like they did in the last two years of former President Barack Obama’s second term.