[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 130 (Tuesday, September 6, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S5322]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DONALD NOMINATION
Mr. ALEXANDER. Madam President, later today the Senate will consider
the nomination by the President of Judge Bernice Donald for the Sixth
Circuit Court of Appeals. Judge Donald is from Memphis, TN. I know her
well. I am here today to introduce her to my colleagues and to
encourage them to support her confirmation.
Judge Donald has been before the Senate before. She has been a
Federal district judge since 1995. Our Judiciary Committee in the
Senate has looked over her qualifications again and has recommended her
to us without dissent. The American Bar Association has reviewed her
credentials and said she is either qualified or well qualified.
I think there is not much doubt about her fitness to serve on the
court of appeals, so in my remarks I would like to talk more about
Judge Donald's role in the community and her role as a pioneer in our
country during her lifetime. She is the sixth of 10 children. Her
parents were a domestic worker and a self-taught mechanic in DeSoto
County, MS, which is just south of Memphis. As a young person, she was
among the first African Americans to integrate in her high school
during the period of desegregation. She obtained a bachelor's degree
from the University of Memphis and graduated from its law school. She
focused her career at the beginning working among the most vulnerable
citizens in Memphis in the Office of Legal Defender.
Here is where the pioneer story continues, not just in desegregating
her high school or working with vulnerable citizens, but only 3 years
after she left law school, she began a judicial career that has spanned
nearly three decades. She became the first African-American female
judge in the history of our State in 1982. Six years later, the Sixth
Circuit Court of Appeals, upon which she has been nominated to serve by
the President, appointed her to serve as U.S. bankruptcy judge for the
Western District of Tennessee. Again she made history--an African-
American female judge had been appointed as a bankruptcy judge in the
United States. Then, in 1995, as I mentioned earlier, President Clinton
nominated her to be a Federal district judge. On December 22 of that
year the Senate confirmed her by unanimous voice vote, and she became
the first African-American female district court judge in the history
of Tennessee. She served in that capacity for 15 years.
She has flourished in her career, not just on the court but in her
profession. She has just concluded a 3-year term as Secretary of the
American Bar Association, and she has previously served on its
Committee on Governance and on its Board of Governors. She has been
equally active in the local and Tennessee bar associations. She gives a
good deal of her time to community organizations: the Memphis Literacy
Council, the University of Memphis alumni board, Big Brothers, Big
Sisters, Calvary Street Ministry, the YWCA, and others.
It is coincidental, but I think it is fitting that Judge Bernice
Donald, a pioneer in so many ways in our State's history, will be the
first nomination for the Federal bench that this body will consider
after the opening of the Martin Luther King Memorial in the Nation's
Capital. Her life, which is full of education and service and
achievement, is a testimonial to the success of Dr. King's movement and
the kind of leadership he inspired.
I commend her on all that she has accomplished both in her profession
and in our State and in her community. I know Memphis is proud of her.
I look forward to voting in favor of her confirmation this afternoon,
and I hope my colleagues will do so as well.
I yield the floor.
Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Casey). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, is there a nominee to report?
____________________