Politico proclaims that there’s a “showdown on the D.C. Circuit.” The Washington Post editorial board calls it the “Republicans’ D.C. Circuit barricade.”
After four years of unfilled vacancies on the nation’s so-called second-highest court, the media is finally giving this confirmation crisis the Pay-Per-View boxing-worthy buzz it deserves.
In case you don’t follow the federal judicial vacancies like we do, there are four spots to be filled on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. One of those spots — Chief Justice John Roberts former seat — has been empty since 2005. That’s what we obsessive-court-watchers refer to as “not good.”
What’s worse is that it’s been years since the Senate last confirmed a judge for the D.C. Circuit bench. The Senate has yet to confirm one of President Obama’s nominees for the court. Last month, after lingering more than two years in nomination limbo, New York attorney Caitlin Halligan asked the president to withdraw her nomination to the court.
But, like the Rebel Alliance, the appellate court may have a new hope. Deputy Solicitor General and D.C. Circuit nominee Sri Srinivasan actually got a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday. And, considering that liberals and conservatives alike praise Srinivasan, he could eventually win the honor of being Obama’s first confirmed nominee to the circuit.
That, of course, still leaves us with three vacancies.
UC Irvine Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky writes with Yale Law student Sam Kleiner at Politico:
Maybe that’s the solution: Flood the Senate with options and hope that some of the nominees trickle through confirmation to plug the holes in the court.
Related Resources:
- The Supreme Court Nominee-in-Waiting (New Yorker)
- Top 5 Things to Know About New Deputy SG Sri Srinivasan (FindLaw’s Supreme Court Blog)
- Obama and the D.C. Circuit: Three Vacancies, No Confirmations (FindLaw’s D.C. Circuit Blog)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules