Los Angeles Times

Rushing through unqualifie­d picks

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Re “Trump remakes the judiciary,” editorial, Nov. 14

President Trump has nominated judicial candidates quickly and the Senate has confirmed them rapidly, bypassing the venerated custom of awaiting American Bar Assn. nominee evaluation­s and ratings. Trump and George W. Bush are the only presidents since Dwight Eisenhower to ignore the ABA recommenda­tions, which help identify candidates who may be weak federal judges.

On Nov. 9, the Judiciary Committee approved district judge nominees Brett Talley and Holly Lou Teeter, whom the ABA had rated not qualified. The full Senate should thoroughly debate their qualificat­ions on the floor and reject the nominees if they are unqualifie­d.

Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) appropriat­ely invited an ABA representa­tive to explain the evaluation system at the Nov. 15 hearing on nominees, and she comprehens­ively explained how the ABA rigorously and fairly evaluates and rates nominees.

Trump and the Senate should more carefully discharge their constituti­onal responsibi­lities to nominate and provide advice and consent regarding highly qualified candidates. Trump and senators must remember that nominees, if confirmed as lifetenure­d judges, will exercise the enormous power of the state. Carl Tobias

Richmond, Va. The writer is a law professor at the University of Richmond.

Someone tell The Times about the late California Chief Justice Rose Bird.

She was appointed to the court by Gov. Jerry Brown in 1977 without having ever spent a day on any bench as a judge. She was the first appellate judge on any level in California to be voted out of office.

It’s not unpreceden­ted for judges to be appointed without any bench experience. It’s only pointed out when the appointmen­t is made by a Republican.

Appointing relatively young judges isn’t new — Brown did it years ago. Marcus Kourtjian

Northridge

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