With eye on vote, Trump stacks US courts with conservatives
WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump has stepped up his drive to fill courts across the United States with conservative judges in an effort to woo voters on the right ahead of the midterm congressional elections.
Coming off his success in appointing two judges strongly aligned with Republican ideology to the Supreme Court, Trump is duplicating that move in federal circuit and district courts – the next two levels in the US justice system.
“I have been there less than two years and I have two of them,” Trump boasted in an election rally on Monday in Texas, referring to Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, the conservative justices who have tilted the Supreme Court strongly toward the right.
“We have a record number of circuit court judges for the time we have been in office,” he added.
“We expect to go to the all-time record.”
The US Constitution empowers the president to make lifetime appointments of judges to all three levels of federal courts, where nearly 900 judges serve. Each needs to be confirmed by the Senate, however.
Since taking office in January 2017, Trump has obtained the confirmation of 84 federal judges, compared to 43 in the same period for his predecessor, Democrat Barack Obama.
Trump has nominated some 50 more, who are awaiting the Senate’s green light.
Trump’s former White House counsel Don McGahn said they have consciously chosen some of the most conservative people possible for the positions. “Some folks that are kind of too hot for primetime,” he described them. “The kind of people that make some people nervous.”
Democrats are angry, but have been powerless to do anything about it because they are a minority in the Senate.
The senior Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, Dianne Feinstein, pointed out that her committee was the only one holding hearings before the midterms.
“Republicans are breaking every norm to stack the courts with young, ideological nominees who will undermine the rights and protections of all Americans for generations to come,” she said. — AFP