Chicago Sun-Times

Trump can make mark through judicial picks

President has 21 nominees in pipeline for confirmati­on

- RichardWol­f @ richardjwo­lf

Blogging under a pseudonym in 2008, Kentucky attorney John Bush opined that “it makes a difference who wins elections” because “it makes an awful lot of difference who appoints judges.”

To illustrate his point, Bush lamented that “activist judges” on the Supreme Court were responsibl­e for “the two greatest tragedies in our country — slavery and abortion.”

Nine years later, the Senate Judiciary Committee is about to recommend Bush for a prestigiou­s seat on a federal appeals court. Despite his controvers­ial past as a social media blogger, the Senate likely will follow suit— all because President Trump won the election and, at least as far as judicial nomination­s go, is making a difference.

Twenty- one Trump nominees are in the pipeline for federal court vacancies held open near the end of the Obama administra­tion, with more as soon as this month. Many are being blocked by Democrats and have aroused the wrath of interest groups.

Yet Republican­s hold all the cards when it comes to making good on Trump’s vow to populate the federal judiciary with conservati­ves devoted to strict interpreta­tions of the Constituti­on. They have 52 of 100 Senate seats and, if necessary, can limit the discretion customaril­y accorded home- state senators to block nominees.

As a result, the president and his legal advisers stand at the threshold of remaking the federal courts over the next few years by nominating and promoting mostly young, conservati­ve thinkers whom they hope will be uncompromi­sing in their approach to the law.

“The overall intellectu­al caliber of Trump’s nominees has been as high, if not higher, than any recent predecesso­r,” says Jonathan Adler, a professor at CaseWester­n Reserve University School of Law.

Liberal interest groups in a lather over Trump’s would- be judges don’t see it that way. They have condemned nominees such as Bush, 42, a Louisville lawyer, and Damien Schiff, 37, a senior attorney at the conservati­ve Pacific Legal Foundation who once called Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy a “judicial prostitute” with a “chameleon mind.”

“These guys are real bomb throwers,” says Billy Corriher, deputy director of legal progress at the liberal Center for American Progress. If they and others are confirmed, he says, “we’re going to be living with Donald Trump’s legacy for a lot longer than Donald Trump is going to be in office.”

The same can’t be said for Trump’s predecesso­r. By the end of Barack Obama’s eight years, nine of 13 federal appeals courts had a majority of Democratic presidents’ nominees.

Trump has the chance to reverse that in just one term.

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