Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Senate Confirms 200th Federal Judge Under Biden as Democrats Surpass Trump's Pace
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 8 months ago on
May 22, 2024

The Senate's confirmation of the 200th federal judge under President Biden marks a milestone, surpassing Trump's pace by a month. (AP File)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The Senate on Wednesday confirmed the 200th federal judge of President Joe Biden’s tenure, about a month earlier than when Donald Trump hit that mark in his term, though Trump still holds the edge when it comes to the most impactful confirmations — those to the Supreme Court and the country’s 13 appellate courts.

The march to 200 culminated with the confirmation of Angela Martinez as a district court judge in Arizona. The milestone reflects the importance that Biden, a former chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., placed on judicial confirmations after Trump put his enormous stamp on the federal judiciary with the confirmation of three Supreme Court justices.

“Reaching 200 judges is a major milestone,” Schumer said just before the 66-28 vote. “Simply put, our 200 judges comprise the most diverse slate of judicial nominations under any president in American history.”

The current pace of judicial confirmations for this White House came despite Biden, a Democrat, coming into office in 2021 with far fewer vacancies, particularly in the influential appellate courts, than Trump, a Republican, did in 2017.

Democrats have solidly backed the president’s judicial nominees, but there have been some cracks in that resolve in recent weeks. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., said he would not support nominees who do not have some bipartisan support, and the two Democratic senators from Nevada are opposing a nominee who would become the nation’s first Muslim appellate court judge. They did so after some law enforcement groups came out against the nomination.

Transforming the Federal Judiciary

White House officials say they have no illusions about the challenges they face but feel reaching 235 is possible. That doesn’t please Republicans.

“Unfortunately, they learned from our example about prioritizing lifetime appointments,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. Meanwhile, liberal advocacy groups are thrilled with the results so far.

“I just cannot rave enough about these judges,” said Jake Faleschini, who leads nominations work at the Alliance for Justice. “It’s been nothing short of transformative of the federal judiciary in terms of both excellence, but also demographic and professional diversity.”

Biden has emphasized adding more female and minority judges to the federal bench. On that front, 127 of the 200 judges confirmed to the bench are women. Fifty-eight are Black and 36 are Hispanic, according to Schumer’s office. Thirty-five judges are Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders, more than any other administration, according to the White House.

In the appellate courts, 30 of the 42 circuit judges confirmed during Biden’s term are women, according to the White House. Thirteen Black women have been chosen as circuit judges, more than all previous administrations combined.

Under Biden, more Hispanic judges have been confirmed to the appellate courts than any other administration.

Looking Ahead

As abortion access remains a vital priority for the Biden administration and a key argument for the president’s reelection bid, the White House also points to several judges with backgrounds on the issue. They include Judge Julie Rikelman of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, who before her nomination argued on behalf of the abortion clinic in Dobbs vs Jackson, the 2022 ruling that dismantled Roe vs. Wade; and Nicole Berner, a former attorney at Planned Parenthood who now serves on the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Conservatives say it is fine to have diversity, but that should not be the focus.

“I think the right standard isn’t trying to check boxes with nominees, but to try to find the men and women who are going to be faithful to the Constitution and the rule of law,” said Carrie Severino, president of JCN, a conservative group that worked to boost support for Trump’s nominees.

About a one-quarter of the judges Trump nominated were women and about 1 in 6 were minorities, according to the Pew Research Center.

Asked about the diversity of Biden’s nominees, GOP senators said there was too much focus on identity politics.

“I’m interested in competent lawyers who will administer justice fairly. Now, there are women that can do that. There are men that can do that. There are people of color that can do that,” said Sen. John Kennedy, R-La. “But their primary characteristic that they’re proudest of is racial identify or gender identify, and activist. And I just don’t think that’s what the American people want to see in their justice system.”

Proponents of diversifying the federal judiciary counter that people who come before the court have more trust in the legal process when they see people who look like them. They said it’s important to diversify the professional backgrounds of judges, too, so that more public defenders and those with a civil rights or non-profit background are considered.

“The American people deserve federal judges who not only look like America, but understand the American experience from every angle,” said Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Fresno Police Arrest Son in Murder of His 62-Year-Old Mother

DON'T MISS

Iraq OKs Marriage for 9-Year-Old Girls, Inciting Outrage

DON'T MISS

Preschools Lose Students as Transitional Kindergarten Expands in California

DON'T MISS

Aaron Glenn Tasked With Ending Jets’ Long Playoff Drought

DON'T MISS

Evacuations Ordered as New Fast-Moving Wildfire Threatens Mountain Homes North of LA

DON'T MISS

Fresno County Traffic Stop Turns Into $640K Cocaine Bust

DON'T MISS

Fresno MLK March Keynote Speaker: ‘We’re Still in This Fight and Struggle’

DON'T MISS

Wired Wednesday: Local Man in Jan. 6 Capitol Riot Heads to Prison Today

DON'T MISS

Stock Market Today: Netflix and AI Excitement Have Wall Street Near All-Time High

DON'T MISS

Progresso Sells Out of New Chicken-Soup Flavored Cough Drops in Less Than an Hour

UP NEXT

Iraq OKs Marriage for 9-Year-Old Girls, Inciting Outrage

UP NEXT

Preschools Lose Students as Transitional Kindergarten Expands in California

UP NEXT

Aaron Glenn Tasked With Ending Jets’ Long Playoff Drought

UP NEXT

Evacuations Ordered as New Fast-Moving Wildfire Threatens Mountain Homes North of LA

UP NEXT

Fresno County Traffic Stop Turns Into $640K Cocaine Bust

UP NEXT

Fresno MLK March Keynote Speaker: ‘We’re Still in This Fight and Struggle’

UP NEXT

Wired Wednesday: Local Man in Jan. 6 Capitol Riot Heads to Prison Today

UP NEXT

Stock Market Today: Netflix and AI Excitement Have Wall Street Near All-Time High

UP NEXT

Progresso Sells Out of New Chicken-Soup Flavored Cough Drops in Less Than an Hour

UP NEXT

Musk Casts Doubt on Trump’s $100 Billion AI Announcement

Aaron Glenn Tasked With Ending Jets’ Long Playoff Drought

2 hours ago

Evacuations Ordered as New Fast-Moving Wildfire Threatens Mountain Homes North of LA

2 hours ago

Fresno County Traffic Stop Turns Into $640K Cocaine Bust

3 hours ago

Fresno MLK March Keynote Speaker: ‘We’re Still in This Fight and Struggle’

3 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Local Man in Jan. 6 Capitol Riot Heads to Prison Today

3 hours ago

Stock Market Today: Netflix and AI Excitement Have Wall Street Near All-Time High

3 hours ago

Progresso Sells Out of New Chicken-Soup Flavored Cough Drops in Less Than an Hour

3 hours ago

Musk Casts Doubt on Trump’s $100 Billion AI Announcement

3 hours ago

Madera County Crash Leaves One Dead. CHP Investigating.

4 hours ago

Tulare County Water Managers Scramble to Fend Off Pumping Sanctions

4 hours ago

Fresno Police Arrest Son in Murder of His 62-Year-Old Mother

A homicide investigation is underway after Shirla Ramirez, 62, was found dead in her Fresno home on Monday, the Fresno Police Department sai...

7 minutes ago

Fresno police are investigating the death of 62-year-old Shirla Ramirez that happened Monday, Jan. 20, 2025, with her son, Brad Ramirez, 35, arrested as the suspect in her homicide. (Fresno PD)
7 minutes ago

Fresno Police Arrest Son in Murder of His 62-Year-Old Mother

Iraq’s parliament passed a law allowing child marriage for girls as young as nine, prompting widespread condemnation from activists and lawmakers. (Shutterstock)
18 minutes ago

Iraq OKs Marriage for 9-Year-Old Girls, Inciting Outrage

1 hour ago

Preschools Lose Students as Transitional Kindergarten Expands in California

Jets Hire Aaron Glenn as New Coach
2 hours ago

Aaron Glenn Tasked With Ending Jets’ Long Playoff Drought

The Hughes Fire, that started on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2025, has already grown to over 3,400 acres with evacuations already in effect. (CalFire)
2 hours ago

Evacuations Ordered as New Fast-Moving Wildfire Threatens Mountain Homes North of LA

CHP K9 sergeant seized 17 pounds of cocaine worth $640,000 during a Fresno County traffic stop, leading to an arrest. (CHP)
3 hours ago

Fresno County Traffic Stop Turns Into $640K Cocaine Bust

Brianna Willis from ABC 30 (Left) asks questions to local leader Wendy McCulley (Right). 01/20/25. (GV Wire/Jahz Tello)
3 hours ago

Fresno MLK March Keynote Speaker: ‘We’re Still in This Fight and Struggle’

Wired Wednesday screencover for 01/22/25. (KMPH Screengrab)
3 hours ago

Wired Wednesday: Local Man in Jan. 6 Capitol Riot Heads to Prison Today

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend