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Don’t Blame GOP for Judicial Vacancies

On last night’s PBS NewsHour, I discussed the politics of confirming President Obama’s judicial nominees with Caroline Fredrickson, executive director of the liberal American Constitution Society. A transcript of the interview and streaming video are available on the NewsHour web site. Here are some excerpts:

CURT LEVEY: Caroline accurately pointed out that there are 20 pending [nominees] who have gotten out of committee. But that’s only 20 out of 91 vacancies. And all but one of those 20 are just a matter of weeks or, at most, a couple of months, which is a very short time historically. I mean, there are many of Bush’s nominees who waited literally years after they got out of committee. There were some nominees who were waiting throughout most of the eight years. So the fact that there’s only one out of the 20 who’s even been waiting three months I think tells you that things are going fast.
——————–
CURT LEVEY: I don’t think [the judicial vacancy rate] has much to do with anything the Republicans are doing. It has to do with a very slow nomination pace by the Obama administration. Obama is not making confirmations a priority, nor is Sen. Reid, the majority leader. Also, there’s just been, let’s face it, a general breakdown in courtesy in the Senate. And so all issues get affected, including judges. And there were also two Supreme Court vacancies in Obama’s first two years, which, for about six months [bring other confirmations to a halt].
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CAROLINE FREDRICKSON: Thirty-seven of those vacancies represent judicial emergencies. And that is a term that’s been defined by the Administrative Office of the Courts to represent an extremely high caseload.

CURT LEVEY: I do agree that judicial emergencies should be given priority. But, again, let’s remember that judicial emergency is not just defined by caseload. It’s also defined by how long the vacancy has existed. And, again, that vacancy may have existed for a long time because Obama was very slow to appoint a nominee.

COMMENTS

  • thomgillespie

    I forget, did DeMint put judicial holds on every single Obama nomination right out of the box for the first two years or was it only 90%?

    –Thom

  • rdelbov

    Reagan let a dozen Carter nominees, including Stephen Breyer, get confirmed in late 1980 and early 1981.

    Bush 41 nominated several Ds to various courts

    Clinton nominated republicans to various courts

    Bush 43 renominated at three Clinton nominees to appealate positions. Bush43 DOJ worked with various senators on district positions.

    Obama has nominated noBush nominees or Republicans for Appeals courts. He has tried to work around most GOP senators on district courts. So Obama has played hard ball and while the pace of his nominations have been slow on a historical basis he also mostly gone hard left on his nominees. He is not cutting deals and so yes he is unlikely to see any DC circuit or 9th nominees get through this year or next. He might not get any more from the 4th Circuit as well. NC was shafted during the Bush 43 years so I say have it your way Mr. president.

    • http://travismonitor.blogspot.com Freedoms Truth

      I don’t see how having fewer Obama judges in the Federal court is a problem, and how getting more Obama nominees is a solution.

      It’s sort of like my preference for Michelle and Barack wasting $10 million on an expensive vacation than having Barack back in DC wasting trillions on corrupt spending.

      As noted, it’s partly a result of leftwing ideology driving Obama’s decision-making. He has had a number of truly horrible nominations and zero good ones.

      Let the crisis persist until we get a new President to clean it up.