and focus on Obama's other judicial nominees. How are they coming along/ It looks like the Senate has had no problem pushing their approvals along.
NOT!
Gridlock has famously prevented Congress from enacting meaningful legislation in recent years, but it's in another area that congressional inaction is truly setting new records. The Senate has confirmed just nine judges nominated by President Obama so far this year. It's the slowest pace of confirmations in more than half a century, on track to match the 11 confirmations in 1960.
It's not unusual for a president to get fewer nominations through the Senate as the end of a White House term nears and the opposition party begins to dream of winning the next presidential election and tapping the judges it prefers. But the current rate is far off from the historical norm. According to the liberal Alliance for Justice, by this point in 2007, when Democrats controlled the Senate, 34 of President George W. Bush's judges had been confirmed.
Republicans have been gumming up the works at each step of the process. Judicial nominations are generally put forward by the president only once they've been approved by both of the home-state senators. Republicans have been slow to give their consent to any nominee, with 55 judicial vacancies currently lacking a nomination. "If you look where these empty seats are, they're almost all in states with at least one Republican senator," says the Alliance for Justice's Kyle Barry. Even when Republican senators appears to support a nominee, they've dragged out the process. Sen. Marco Rubio, for example, recommended Mary Flores to the White House for a spot on a Florida district court, but has been withholding his so-called "blue slip" approval form, preventing her from moving forward to a hearing before the Judiciary Committee. (He says he is still reviewing her qualifications.)
Even after a judicial nominee has cleared the Judiciary Committee with bipartisan support, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been slow about scheduling votes on the Senate floor, where 11 nominees are awaiting confirmation. The delays generally haven't been due to controversy about the nominees. The last two judges confirmed, for district court seats in New York, were approved by votes of 95-2 and 88-0, respectively.
So, it's not just Scalia's replacement that is the problem, it's the whole friggin' Senate leadership. Who'd a thunk it?
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/11/senate-republicans-block-obama-judge-nominations
NOT!
Gridlock has famously prevented Congress from enacting meaningful legislation in recent years, but it's in another area that congressional inaction is truly setting new records. The Senate has confirmed just nine judges nominated by President Obama so far this year. It's the slowest pace of confirmations in more than half a century, on track to match the 11 confirmations in 1960.
It's not unusual for a president to get fewer nominations through the Senate as the end of a White House term nears and the opposition party begins to dream of winning the next presidential election and tapping the judges it prefers. But the current rate is far off from the historical norm. According to the liberal Alliance for Justice, by this point in 2007, when Democrats controlled the Senate, 34 of President George W. Bush's judges had been confirmed.
Republicans have been gumming up the works at each step of the process. Judicial nominations are generally put forward by the president only once they've been approved by both of the home-state senators. Republicans have been slow to give their consent to any nominee, with 55 judicial vacancies currently lacking a nomination. "If you look where these empty seats are, they're almost all in states with at least one Republican senator," says the Alliance for Justice's Kyle Barry. Even when Republican senators appears to support a nominee, they've dragged out the process. Sen. Marco Rubio, for example, recommended Mary Flores to the White House for a spot on a Florida district court, but has been withholding his so-called "blue slip" approval form, preventing her from moving forward to a hearing before the Judiciary Committee. (He says he is still reviewing her qualifications.)
Even after a judicial nominee has cleared the Judiciary Committee with bipartisan support, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been slow about scheduling votes on the Senate floor, where 11 nominees are awaiting confirmation. The delays generally haven't been due to controversy about the nominees. The last two judges confirmed, for district court seats in New York, were approved by votes of 95-2 and 88-0, respectively.
So, it's not just Scalia's replacement that is the problem, it's the whole friggin' Senate leadership. Who'd a thunk it?
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/11/senate-republicans-block-obama-judge-nominations