Current Nominations Battle
More than half of the U.S. population currently lives in a community with a courtroom vacancy. Today there are 20 judicial nominees who are awaiting a simple up-or-down vote in the U.S. Senate. Unfortunately, most of these nominees have been waiting months for a vote, with the judicial work of the American people going undone. These 20 nominees:
Enjoy broad Democratic and Republican support:
- 13 were approved unanimously by Democrats and Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee
- 5 received with just one “no” vote
- 2 were approved on party line votes
- 10 of the 20 would fill a “judicial emergency
- 10 are represented by states with at least one Republican Senator
- 9 are women
- 10 are minorities (2 Hispanic, 4 African American, 3 Asian American, 1 gay)
- At this point in George W. Bush’s term, Circuit Court nominees waited an average of 28 days from Committee approval to Senate vote. President Obama’s nominees have waited an average of 139 days.
- At this point in George W. Bush’s term, District Court nominees waited an average of 22 days from Committee approval to Senate vote. President Obama’s nominees have waited an average of 100 days.
Americans must have equal access to a fair hearing in court, and obstruction by Republicans is preventing that from happening.
- Unprecedented republican obstruction in Washington has left us with over 80 vacancies on the federal courts, leading to a backlog of cases that undermines our system of justice and makes it impossible for most Americans to have their case heard in a timely manner.
- The Senate is failing in its Constitutional duty to advice and consent to nominees to fill the nation’s courtrooms.
- It is time to put aside the partisan bickering, get rid of the anonymous ‘holds’ that Senators can place on a judicial appointment, and fill these critical vacancies so Americans can have their voice heard in court.
- Americans don’t like a system (especially a court system) where corporations and the wealthy have better access and a different set of rules to play by than everybody else. Instead they want a system where everyone can get a fair shake.
- Americans – across the political spectrum and across the income spectrum – consistently say that “having the laws apply equally to everyone” is the most important right included in the Constitution, and the right that’s most at risk today.
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