Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden to get first chance at making mark on judiciary

-

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden has two seats to fill on the influentia­l appeals court in the nation’s capital that regularly feeds judges to the Supreme Court.

They are among the roughly 10% of federal judgeships that are or will soon be open, giving Mr. Biden his first chance to make his mark on the American judiciary.

Barring an improbable expansion of the Supreme Court, Mr. Biden won’t be able to do anything about the high court’s entrenched conservati­ve majority any time soon. Justice Clarence Thomas, 72, is the oldest of the court’s conservati­ves, while the three appointees of former President Donald Trump, ranging in age from 49 to 56, are expected to be on the bench for decades.

Democrats traditiona­lly have not made the judiciary a focus, but that is changing after four years of Mr. Trump and the vast changes he made. Mr. Biden’s appointmen­ts are also the only concrete moves he has right now to affect the judiciary at large, though there is talk about expanding the number of judges on lower courts.

The nearly 90 seats Mr. Biden can fill, which give their occupants life tenure after Senate confirmati­on, are fewer than Mr. Trump inherited four years ago. That’s because Republican­s who controlled the Senate in the final two years of the Obama White House confirmed relatively few judges.

Included in the tally are 10 seats on federal courts of appeals where nearly all appeals — other than the few dozen decided by the Supreme Court each year — come to an end.

One seat is held by Judge Merrick Garland, whose confirmati­on as attorney general is expected in the coming days. Another longtime judge on the court, David Tatel, has said he is cutting back on his duties, a change that allows Mr. Biden to appoint his successor.

Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Justice Thomas were appellate judges at the courthouse at the bottom of Capitol Hill before they joined the high court atop the Hill.

The late Justices Antonin Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg also served on the appeals court, where they first formed their lasting friendship.

Following Scalia’s death just over five years ago, President Barack Obama nominated Judge Garland to the Supreme Court, but Senate Republican­s didn’t give him even a hearing, much less a vote.

So when Mr. Trump took office in January 2017, he had a high court vacancy to fill. He ended up making three Supreme Court appointmen­ts to go along with 54 appellate court picks and 174 trial judges, aided by then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s determinat­ion to, as he put it, “leave no vacancy behind.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States