Posted on 11/04/2017 8:00:10 AM PDT by markomalley
The Senate confirmed five new federal judges this week, bringing President Donald Trumps total to date to 13 jurists.
The Senate voted to confirm Amy Barrett from Indiana to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Joan Larsen of Michigan to the 6th Circuit, Allison Eid of Colorado to the 10th Circuit, Stephanos Bibas of Pennsylvania to the 3rd Circuit, and Trevor McFadden to the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.
The appeals court judges were confirmed mostly along party lines, with a handful of Democrats crossing over to confirm these highly qualified conservatives. McFadden was confirmed 84-10, with six senators not voting.
To recap this years confirmations: We have one new Supreme Court justice, eight new federal appeals court judges, and four new U.S. district court judges. Trump thus surpasses the four prior presidents records, while tying President Ronald Reagans accomplishment of placing eight judges on the appeals courts in his first year.
And there are still several weeks before the Senate recesses for Christmas, so more of Trumps superb nominees might be confirmed before the end of the year.
Trump should be congratulated for this achievement. In this day and age, its no easy feat to guide judicial nominations through the cogs of the Senate.
While theres still plenty of work to do, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, should also be congratulated for their leadership.
In the face of resistance from the left, we now have several new constitutionalist judges who, with any luck, will serve with distinction for decades to come.
Speaking of resistance, its worth noting that from 1949when the cloture rule was extended to cover nominationsthrough nine presidential administrations, there were only seven cloture votes on all nominations in a presidents first year.
But that changed starting this year. There have been 51 cloture votes on Trumps nominees in his first 10 months in office. Democrats have forced cloture votes on 12 of 13 judicial nominees and dozens of executive branch nominees.
Invoking cloture used to be a meaningful step, because it took 60 votes to end debate so that a confirmation vote could occur. In essence, it was a way to filibuster a nominee.
But Senate Democrats did away with the filibuster for lower court judges and executive branch nominees in November 2013, and Republicans put the final nail in its coffin this past spring with Neil Gorsuchs confirmation to the Supreme Court. Now, demanding a cloture vote and up to 30 hours of debate on each nominee is simply a tactic to delay and obstruct.
With any luck, McConnell will be able to keep these nominations rolling. There are still 46 nominees pending and more than 160 current and future known vacancies on the federal courts.
Many of Trumps outstanding nominees face obstacles. David Stras has waited for a hearing since May and Steve Grasz was rated not qualified by the American Bar Associationlikely because of his personal views on abortion.
Michael Brennan and Ryan Bounds face obstruction from some of their home state senators. Kyle Duncan, Jeff Mateer, and Matthew Kacsmaryk have been attacked by the left for advancing religious liberty and challenging the LGBTQ agenda.
Greg Katsas, who currently serves as deputy White House counsel, was harangued during his confirmation hearing for not agreeing to recuse himself from a whole host of matters that may come before him if confirmed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
The confirmations this week are a cause for celebration and a positive development for the rule of law. Trump is well on his way to securing a generation of judges on par with those of the Reagan Revolution.
Note my tagline.
Another blessing flowing from the Trump Presidency...
And even something to be glad about the Senate being in GOP hands...far and few between as of late...and why it is essential, despite everything, that we hold control of that chamber in 2018 - even more important than the House because the judicial nominees will impact the country far longer than Trump’s tenure in office.
Yeah!
Excellent.
He needs to be packing he courts to fill every open position at every level.
Five in a week is a good start for the GOP Senate as the Democrat opposition has been slow-walking the confirn=mation process for judges and administration appointees by insisting on extending the debates and process.
Trump is quietly and steadily fulfilling his campaign promises.
You're right on this... We have to keep the Senate at all costs... including voting for some 'establishment types'... Judges Trump puts on the bench will be there for decades... they'll change the course of the country.
That matters.
Mitch McConnell saved us from having a liberal Supreme Court. That matters too. So, we hold our noses and keep the Senate... (first we dump ALL democrats - then we go after the RINOs...)
“Note my tagline.”
It is a strong week, a VERY STRONG WEEK. It’s the other 36 weeks that have been next to useless. Put 5 on the bench each week, and in 7 months we’re through the backlog.
But it won’t happen, of course.
More winning!
I have to admit, this has been a very pleasant surprise for me. President Trump has appointed very good nominees for the federal bench. Now, if we can have some retirements or deaths on the Supreme!
This is my main issue. Trump cleans up the judiciary and hes a success. Everything else is added gravy
>> Steve Grasz was rated not qualified by the American Bar Associationlikely because of his personal views on abortion.
*************************************************************
If true, that is disgusting.
The American Bar Association is a disgusting swamp of leftist pukes.
Take that NeverTrumpers!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.