The Palm Beach Post

Florida shows bipartisan support for judicial nominees

- LINDA GELLER-SCHWARTZ, BOCA RATON Editor’s note: Linda Geller-Schwartz is the Florida State Policy Advocate for National Council of Jewish Women.

President Donald Trump’s relationsh­ip with Florida has been a hot topic since he decided to spend most of his winter weekends at Mar-a-Lago. These stays have added up to a tab of millions of taxpayer dollars and earned him a lot of bad ink in the state. But now he has an opportunit­y to get something meaningful done quickly and in a bipartisan fashion for Floridians. He can act on an appeal from our two U.S. senators, Bill Nelson and Marco Rubio, to fill vacant seats in our federal courts.

These two senators have jointly asked the president to re-nominate three of President Barack Obama’s judicial nominees to Florida’s federal courts who had been vetted and approved by both senators, but left waiting for hearings (along with Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland) when their nomination­s expired in January.

Nelson’s and Rubio’s rare show of bipartisan­ship couldn’t come at a better time for Florida’s federal courts. There are currently seven federal judicial vacancies in Florida and five of them are formally classified as “judicial emergencie­s”, meaning there simply are not enough judges to handle the growing caseload. As judicial vacancies remain unfilled, Floridians who rely on our court system are the ones who suffer.

Last year, the watchdog group Integrity Florida issued a report detailing the myriad ways that lengthy judicial vacancies delay and deny justice for Floridians. Prolonged judicial vacancies inevitably result in case delays, higher caseloads, increased administra­tive stress and judicial burnout. Such judicial vacancies “threaten the timely administra­tion of justice in both criminal and civil cases” according to the report.

In their letter, the senators asked the president to re-nominate Patricia Barksdale and William Jung for vacancies in the Middle District of Florida, and Phillip Lammens in the Northern District, With our courts already stretched razor thin, it only makes sense to move these qualified bipartisan nominees through the process rather than starting over from scratch. To underscore this point, Nelson and Rubio made clear in their letter that “timely action is needed as the two vacancies in the Middle District are considered judicial emergencie­s.”

The letter also refers to the failure of Senate leaders to take “timely action in the last Congress.” In addition to the highly publicized blocking of President Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, Judge Merrick Garland, Senate Republican­s in recent years have refused to act on numerous lower court vacancies, caus- ing the number of judicial vacancies to skyrocket. As a result, Trump now faces the daunting task of filling more than 120 federal court vacancies

Floridians expect and deserve to have a fair and functionin­g judicial system, and that requires our courts to be working at full capacity. Nelson and Rubio should be commended for setting aside partisan politics for the sake of our judicial system and the public interest. For his part, Trump should take notice and heed their advice.

The president says he gets most of his work done on the weekend. Maybe he could invite Rubio and Nelson to play golf at Trump Internatio­nal Golf Club and get some judges seated.

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