Barack Obama judicial appointment controversies

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2603:8000:cf00:5f:9c4c:b885:af60:c4b0 (talk) at 21:05, 20 April 2023 (Successful renominations: Do not remove any of these fixes because most of them has bad grammar and no citation of these confirmation votes. So, do not remove or undo any of them because you think it is unnecessary.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

U.S. President Barack Obama nominated over 400 individuals for federal judgeships during his presidency. Of these nominations, Congress confirmed 329 judgeships, 173 during the 111th & 112th Congresses[1] and 156 during the 113th and 114th Congresses.[2]

Republicans successfully blocked some confirmations, either by filibuster or voting against cloture, even while the Democratic caucus held a Senate majority (2009–2015). Senator Chuck Grassley, then-ranking Republican on the judiciary, said that more nominees could have been considered if not for the January 2012 National Labor Relations Board recess appointments;[3] the Supreme Court later unanimously ruled these January 2012 appointments illegal in NLRB v. Noel Canning.[4]

In response, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid invoked the so-called parliamentary nuclear option on November 21, 2013, which changed the Senate's confirmation threshold for all executive nominees except for the Supreme Court.[5] While Senate confirmations of Obama judicial nominees rose in 2014 following the "nuclear option," the greatest number of rejection of Obama nominees occurred following the 2014 United States Senate elections, where the Republicans gained nine seats and majority control of the chamber. President Obama ultimately nominated 70 individuals for 104 different federal judgeships during this Congress, with 20 confirmations.[6]

With the death of Antonin Scalia in February 2016 in the beginning of a presidential election year, the Republican majority in the Senate made it their stated policy to refuse to consider any nominee to the Supreme Court, arguing that the next president should be the one to appoint Scalia's replacement.[7] President Obama nominated Merrick Garland for the open Supreme Court seat, but the Senate did not consider the nomination.

List of unsuccessful federal judicial nominations

Obama made 80 nominations for federal judgeships that were not confirmed by the Senate. Of these, 7 were withdrawn by Obama, while the other 73 expired at an adjournment of the Senate, including 54 that were pending at the close of the 114th Congress. As of September 27, 2022, 23 of his unsuccessful nominees had been nominated to federal judgeships by subsequent presidents, with 22 of them having been confirmed.

Nominee Court Nomination
date
Date of
final action
Final action Subsequent federal judicial nominations Seat filled by Ref.
Supreme Court
Merrick Garland SCOTUS March 16, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Neil Gorsuch [8]
Courts of appeals
Robert N. Chatigny 2nd Cir. February 24, 2010 September 13, 2010 returned to the president Christopher F. Droney [9][10]
Goodwin Liu 9th Cir. February 24, 2010 July 29, 2011 withdrawn by Pres. Obama Jacqueline Nguyen [11][12][13]
Edward C. DuMont Fed. Cir. April 14, 2010 January 5, 2011 withdrawn by Pres. Obama Richard G. Taranto [14][15]
Victoria F. Nourse 7th Cir. July 14, 2010 January 5, 2011 returned to the president Michael B. Brennan [16][17]
Caitlin Halligan D.C. Cir. September 29, 2010 March 22, 2013 withdrawn by Pres. Obama Patricia Millett [18][19][20][21]
Stephen Six 10th Cir. March 9, 2011 January 3, 2012 returned to the president Nancy Moritz [22]
Donald Karl Schott 7th Cir. January 12, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Michael B. Brennan [23]
Myra C. Selby 7th Cir. January 12, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Amy Coney Barrett [24]
Jennifer Klemetsrud Puhl 8th Cir. January 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Ralph R. Erickson [25]
Abdul Kallon 11th Cir. February 11, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Kevin Newsom [26]
Lucy Koh 9th Cir. February 25, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president 9th Cir. (nominated September 20, 2021, confirmed December 13, 2021) Daniel P. Collins [27]
Rebecca Ross Haywood 3rd Cir. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Stephanos Bibas [28]
Lisabeth Tabor Hughes 6th Cir. March 17, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Amul Thapar [29]
District courts
Louis B. Butler W.D. Wis. September 30, 2009 January 3, 2012 returned to the president James D. Peterson [30][31][32][33]
Charles Bernard Day D. Md. July 21, 2010 January 5, 2011 withdrawn by Pres. Obama George L. Russell III [34][35]
Michael Green W.D.N.Y. January 26, 2011 January 3, 2012 returned to the president Frank P. Geraci Jr. [36]
Natasha Perdew Silas N.D. Ga. January 26, 2011 January 3, 2012 returned to the president Mark Howard Cohen [37]
Linda T. Walker N.D. Ga. January 26, 2011 January 3, 2012 returned to the president Leigh Martin May [38]
Arvo Mikkanen N.D. Okla. February 2, 2011 January 3, 2012 returned to the president John E. Dowdell [39]
Elissa F. Cadish D. Nev. February 16, 2012 January 4, 2013 withdrawn by Pres. Obama Richard Boulware II [40][41]
William L. Thomas S.D. Fla. November 14, 2012 January 4, 2013 returned to the president Robin L. Rosenberg [42][43]
Jennifer Prescod May-Parker E.D.N.C. June 20, 2013 January 6, 2014 returned to the president Richard E. Myers II [44][45]
Alison Renee Lee D.S.C. June 26, 2013 January 6, 2014 withdrawn by Pres. Obama A. Marvin Quattlebaum Jr. [46][47]
Michael P. Boggs N.D. Ga. December 19, 2013 January 6, 2014 returned to the president Michael Lawrence Brown [48][49]
Mary Barzee Flores S.D. Fla. February 26, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Rodney Smith [50]
Julien Neals D.N.J. February 26, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D.N.J. (nominated April 19, 2021, confirmed June 8, 2021) Evelyn Padin [51]
Edward L. Stanton III W.D. Tenn. May 21, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Tommy Parker [52]
Mark A. Young C.D. Cal. July 16, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Stanley Blumenfeld [53]
Susan Paradise Baxter W.D. Pa. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president W.D. Pa. (nominated December 20, 2017, confirmed August 28, 2018) Herself [54]
Inga S. Bernstein D. Mass. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Angel Kelley [55]
Gary R. Brown E.D.N.Y. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president E.D.N.Y. (nominated May 15, 2018, confirmed December 19, 2019) Himself [56]
Robert J. Colville W.D. Pa. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president W.D. Pa. (nominated March 5, 2019, confirmed December 19, 2019) Marilyn Horan [57]
Marilyn Horan W.D. Pa. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president W.D. Pa. (nominated December 20, 2017, confirmed September 6, 2018) Peter J. Phipps [58]
Dax Eric López N.D. Ga. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Michael Lawrence Brown [59]
John Milton Younge E.D. Pa. July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president E.D. Pa. (nominated July 17, 2018, confirmed July 31, 2019) Himself [60]
Clare E. Connors D. Haw. September 8, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Jill Otake [61]
Stephanie A. Gallagher D. Md. September 8, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D. Md. (nominated June 11, 2018, confirmed September 11, 2019) Herself [62]
Mary S. McElroy D.R.I. September 8, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D.R.I. (nominated April 12, 2018, confirmed September 11, 2019) Herself [63]
Paul Lewis Abrams C.D. Cal. December 16, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president John W. Holcomb [64]
Suzanne Mitchell W.D. Okla. December 16, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Patrick Wyrick [65]
Scott L. Palk W.D. Okla. December 16, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president W.D. Okla. (nominated May 8, 2017, confirmed October 26, 2017) Himself [66]
Ronald G. Russell D. Utah December 16, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Howard C. Nielson Jr. [67]
Winfield D. Ong S.D. Ind. January 12, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president James R. Sweeney II [68]
Terrence J. Campbell D. Kan. January 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Holly Teeter [69]
Stephanie A. Finley W.D. La. February 4, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Michael J. Juneau [70]
Claude J. Kelly III E.D. La. February 4, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Barry Ashe [71]
Donald W. Beatty D.S.C. February 25, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president A. Marvin Quattlebaum Jr. [72]
Donald C. Coggins Jr. D.S.C. February 25, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D.S.C. (nominated August 3, 2017, confirmed November 16, 2017) Himself [73]
David Counts W.D. Tex. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president W.D. Tex. (nominated September 11, 2017, confirmed January 11, 2018) Himself [74]
E. Scott Frost N.D. Tex. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president James Wesley Hendrix [75]
James Wesley Hendrix N.D. Tex. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president N.D. Tex. (nominated January 17, 2019, confirmed July 30, 2019) Karen Gren Scholer [76]
Irma Carrillo Ramirez N.D. Tex. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Ada Brown [77]
Karen Gren Scholer E.D. Tex. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president N.D. Tex. (nominated September 7, 2017, confirmed March 5, 2018) Sean D. Jordan [78]
Kathleen Marie Sweet W.D.N.Y. March 15, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president John Sinatra [79]
David Nye D. Idaho April 5, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D. Idaho (nominated May 8, 2017, confirmed July 12, 2017) Himself [80]
Beth M. Andrus W.D. Wash. April 14, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Lauren J. King [81]
J. Michael Diaz W.D. Wash. April 14, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president John H. Chun [82]
Kathleen M. O'Sullivan W.D. Wash. April 14, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Tana Lin [83]
Patricia D. Barksdale M.D. Fla. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Wendy Berger [84]
Todd E. Edelman D.D.C. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D.D.C. (nominated September 27, 2022, confirmation pending) Carl J. Nichols [85]
William F. Jung M.D. Fla. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president M.D. Fla. (nominated December 21, 2017, confirmed September 6, 2018) Himself [86]
Philip R. Lammens N.D. Fla. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president T. Kent Wetherell II [87]
Florence Y. Pan D.D.C. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D.D.C. (nominated June 15, 2021, cofirmed September 23, 2021)
D.C. Cir. (nominated May 25, 2022, confirmed September 20, 2022)
Dabney L. Friedrich [88]
Regina M. Rodriguez D. Colo. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president D. Colo. (nominated April 19, 2021, confirmed June 8, 2021) Daniel D. Domenico [89]
Patricia Timmons-Goodson E.D.N.C. April 28, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Richard E. Myers II [90]
Abid Riaz Qureshi D.D.C. September 6, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Timothy J. Kelly [91]
Diane Gujarati E.D.N.Y. September 13, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president E.D.N.Y. (nominated May 15, 2018, confirmed September 10, 2020) Herself [92]
Court of International Trade
Jeanne E. Davidson Intl. Trade September 8, 2014 January 7, 2015 returned to the president M. Miller Baker [93][94]
Elizabeth J. Drake Intl. Trade July 30, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Timothy M. Reif [95]
Article I courts
Gloria Wilson Shelton Vet. Cl. June 22, 2011 January 24, 2012 withdrawn by Pres. Obama Margaret Bartley [96]
Nancy B. Firestone Fed. Cl. April 10, 2014 January 7, 2015 returned to the president Ryan T. Holte [97][98]
Thomas L. Halkowski Fed. Cl. April 10, 2014 January 7, 2015 returned to the president David A. Tapp [99][100]
Armando Bonilla Fed. Cl. May 21, 2014 January 7, 2015 returned to the president Fed. Cl. (nominated July 13, 2021, confirmed December 18, 2021) Himself [101][102]
Patricia M. McCarthy Fed. Cl. May 21, 2014 January 7, 2015 returned to the president Matthew H. Solomson [103][104]
Jeri Somers Fed. Cl. May 21, 2014 January 7, 2015 returned to the president Richard Hertling [105][106]
Elizabeth A. Copeland T.C. May 4, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president T.C. (nominated August 3, 2017, confirmed August 28, 2018) Patrick J. Urda [107]
Vik Edwin Stoll T.C. November 9, 2015 January 3, 2017 returned to the president Elizabeth A. Copeland [108]
Article IV courts
Frances Tydingco-Gatewood D. Guam May 18, 2016 January 3, 2017 returned to the president TBD [109]

Nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court

Following the death of Associate Justice of the Supreme Court Antonin Scalia in February 2016, President Obama nominated Merrick Garland to fill Scalia's seat on the Supreme Court. At the time of his nomination, Garland was the Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Scalia's death led to an unusual situation in which a Democratic president had the opportunity to appoint a Supreme Court nominee while the Republicans controlled the United States Senate; before Scalia's death; such a situation last occurred when a Senate Republican majority confirmed Grover Cleveland's nomination of Rufus Wheeler Peckham in 1895.[110] While Garland himself was not personally controversial, Scalia was considered one of the more conservative members of the Supreme Court. Political and legal commentators noted that a more liberal replacement could shift the Court's ideological balance for many years into the future, as the confirmation of Garland would have given Democratic appointees a majority on the Supreme Court for the first time since the Harry Blackmun's confirmation in 1970.[111]

Following Scalia's death, Republican Senate leaders announced that they did not plan to consider any Supreme Court nomination during the president's last year in office, citing the upcoming 2016 United States presidential election.[112] Senate Democrats argued that there was sufficient time to vote on a nominee before the election.[113] Garland's nomination ultimately expired on January 3, 2017, with the end of the 114th Congress. The nomination remained before the Senate for 293 days,[114] the longest such nomination in American history Supreme Court nomination.[115]

On January 31, 2017, President Donald Trump announced his selection of Judge Neil Gorsuch for the open Supreme Court seat. Gorsuch was confirmed on April 7, 2017, by a Republican-majority Senate, 54–45[116] and sworn in on April 10, 2017.[117]

Failed, stalled or filibustered appellate nominations

Failed nominations

Successful appointments

Failed, stalled or filibustered district court nominations

Failed nominations

Successful nominations

  • United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island
    • John J. McConnell, Jr.: McConnell was first nominated on March 10, 2010.[215] McConnell had donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Democratic campaigns, including over eight thousand each to the campaigns of Rhode Island Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse.[215] McConnell's critics contended that his prolific political contributions suggest that McConnell would be a partisan judge.[216] On May 4, 2011, the Senate invoked cloture on McConnell's nomination in a 63–33 vote, and he was confirmed later that same day in a 50–44 vote.[217] At the time, the cloture petition to break the filibuster marked one of the rare instances that such a motion had been required to force a vote on a district court nominee, with only three prior instances recorded.[218]
  • United States District Court for the Northern District of California
    • Edward M. Chen: Chen faced opposition due to his work as an attorney for the ACLU.[124][219] On May 5, 2011, Senator Harry Reid received unanimous consent from the Senate to proceed to an executive session of the Senate at a future time, eliminating the need to file for cloture on Chen's nomination.[220] On May 10, 2011, Chen was confirmed by a 56–42 vote.
  • United States District Court for the District of Arizona
    • Rosemary Márquez: On June 23, 2011, President Obama nominated Marquez, a Tucson defense attorney, to the federal court in Arizona. However, Arizona's two Republican senators, John McCain and Jon Kyl, refused to return their blue slips.[221] McCain said that he did not believe that Marquez was qualified, telling a newspaper, "I've been working with Sen. Kyl, but we do not feel at this time that she's qualified."[222] On January 28, 2014, the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on her nomination as well as five other individuals nominated to the same court. She was confirmed on May 15, 2014, by a vote of 81–15.
  • United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri
    • Ronnie L. White: On November 7, 2013, President Obama nominated Missouri Supreme Court Justice White to serve on the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri.[223] White had previously been nominated for the same position by President Bill Clinton in 1997, but the nomination was defeated.[224] The nomination drew controversy, as Republicans charged White as being a liberal ideologue who was biased in favor of criminal defendants. He received a hearing before the United States Senate Judiciary Committee on May 20, 2014.[225] On June 19, 2014, his nomination was reported out of committee by a vote of 10–8.[226] On July 16, 2014, the Senate voted 54–43 for cloture on White's nomination, ending a Republican-led filibuster. Later that same day, senators voted 53–44 to confirm White.[227]

Impacts of vacancies

A 2016 study found that the current rate of federal judicial vacancies (10 percent) had led prosecutors to dismiss more cases and had led defendants to be more likely to plead guilty and less likely to be incarcerated.[228] The authors found that "the current rate of vacancies has resulted in 1,000 fewer prison inmates annually compared to a fully-staffed court system, a 1.5 percent decrease."[228]

Nominations that were made at the end of Obama's term and later renominated

Successful renominations

See also

References

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  58. ^ "PN754 — Marilyn Jean Horan — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  59. ^ "PN756 — Dax Eric Lopez — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  61. ^ "PN773 — Clare E. Connors — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  66. ^ "PN1036 — Scott L. Palk — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  69. ^ "PN1092 — Terrence J. Campbell — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  71. ^ "PN1149 — Claude J. Kelly III — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  72. ^ "PN1184 — Donald W. Beatty — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  74. ^ "PN1226 — Walter David Counts III — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  79. ^ "PN1233 — Kathleen Marie Sweet — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  80. ^ "PN1297 — David C. Nye — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  81. ^ "PN1367 — Beth M. Andrus — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  82. ^ "PN1368 — J. Michael Diaz — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  83. ^ "PN1369 — Kathleen M. O'Sullivan — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  84. ^ "PN1398 — Patricia D. Barksdale — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  85. ^ "PN1399 — Todd E. Edelman — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  86. ^ "PN1400 — William F. Jung — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  87. ^ "PN1401 — Philip R. Lammens — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  88. ^ "PN1402 — Florence Y. Pan — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  89. ^ "PN1403 — Regina M. Rodriguez — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  90. ^ "PN1404 — Patricia Ann Timmons-Goodson — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  91. ^ "PN1661 — Abid Riaz Qureshi — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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  102. ^ "PN6 — Armando Omar Bonilla — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  103. ^ "PN1728 — Patricia M. McCarthy — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  104. ^ "PN9 — Patricia M. McCarthy — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  105. ^ "PN1729 — Jeri Kaylene Somers — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  106. ^ "PN10 — Jeri Kaylene Somers — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  107. ^ "PN452 — Elizabeth Ann Copeland — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  108. ^ "PN932 — Vik Edwin Stoll — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
  109. ^ "PN1462 — Frances Marie Tydingco-Gatewood — The Judiciary". Congress.gov.
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