The Arizona Republic

Republican­s could fill court benches

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Colorado for about 400 of the network’s donors, Koch officials distribute­d a one-page document explaining the blue-slip practice and urging attendees — many of them big players in Republican politics — to press the issue with the Senate’s GOP leadership and “other Republican senators you know.”

“Tell them not to allow needless delay tactics and obstructio­n of the process,” the document reads. The stakes are high. When Trump entered office, there were more than 100 vacancies on the federal bench — an opportunit­y created in part by Senate Republican­s blocking many of President Obama’s nominees before he left office. Removing the blue-slip obstacle could help Trump reverse, in a single term, the Democrats’ advantage on the nation’s 13 federal appeals courts and shape the federal judiciary for decades.

Nine of the 13 appellate courts have a majority of Democratic presidents’ nominees. Trump has announced 22 nominees to the lower courts, including nine to the appeals courts, a pipeline to the Supreme Court. Federal judges have lifetime appointmen­ts.

More lower-court nomination­s are on the way. Leonard Leo, executive vice president of the conservati­ve Federalist Society who has advised the White House on judicial picks, told USA TODAY that Trump has signed off behind the scenes on a “few dozen” more still-to-be-announced nominees to the federal bench.

Holden’s network plans to spend as much as $400 million to advance its free-market, limitedreg­ulation agenda before the 2018 elections. He called the lower-court nomination­s a “huge priority” for the political empire associated with Charles Koch and his brother, David.

The Supreme Court typically takes about 80 cases a year, so the group is focused on shaping the lower courts that “are rendering all the decisions,” Holden said.

The Kochs’ Kansas-based industrial conglomera­te, Koch Industries, is among the corporate donors to the Federalist Society, and Leo attended the donor conclave in June.

Other Republican-aligned activists are weighing in.

Friday, the conservati­ve Judicial

Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, the Republican chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he expects to abide by the blue-slip tradition. But he and other top Republican­s also said home-state senators should have less say about nominees to regional appeals courts, which cover multiple states.

Democrats and liberal groups have accused Trump of outsourcin­g the judicial vetting process to conservati­ve organizati­ons, such as the Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation think tank.

In a memo in May, California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said ending the blue-slip practice would allow “nominees to be handpicked by right-wing groups.”

Nan Aron, president of the liberal Alliance for Justice, said stripping Democrats’ power to “have a meaningful conversati­on” with Republican­s about nominees could undermine an independen­t judiciary

“The administra­tion, together with ultra-conservati­ve groups, will pack individual­s who will rubber-stamp President Trump’s agenda across a range of issues,” Aron said.

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