Thursday, November 25, 2010

Some Senators Stall Judicial Nominee Because He Worked for ACLU

The L.A. Times editorializes plainly: "President Obama's nominations to the federal bench have been stalled by Republicans in continuation of a partisan feud that dates back, depending on who's counting, to the George W. Bush, Clinton or Reagan administrations. Three California nominees are emblematic of the problem. They were all approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee months ago and received stellar evaluations from the American Bar Assn., but it's possible they won't be confirmed by the Senate (or will be rejected, though that would be a travesty) before the 111th Congress winds down.


Two of the nominees are for the U.S. District Court, the labor-intensive front line of the federal judicial system. Both Edward M. Chen, nominated for the Northern District of California, and Kimberly Mueller, chosen for the Eastern District, are currently federal magistrate judges. Both were unanimously rated "well qualified" by an ABA panel. Chen was first approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee in October 2009; Mueller was approved in May of this year. No serious objections have been raised to either nomination, though some conservatives have complained, outrageously, about Chen's past affiliation with the American Civil Liberties Union.
The third candidate whose nomination has been languishing is UC Berkeley law professor Goodwin Liu, selected for a seat on the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which has jurisdiction over California and other Western states. Liu was approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee first in May and again this month after Obama resubmitted his nomination. He also was unanimously rated "well qualified" by the ABA panel."

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