[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 102 (Wednesday, June 24, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4591-S4592]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JUDICIAL NOMINATIONS
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, earlier this month, the Senate Judiciary
Committee approved the PATENT Act with a strong bipartisan vote. As the
Senate continues to consider this important, balanced legislation aimed
at curbing abusive patent litigation practices, it is critical that the
court of appeals that considers patent claims be at full strength.
Legislation alone cannot solve the problems facing Main Street
businesses from abuses of the patent system; we also need dedicated
judges, such as Kara Farnandez Stoll, on the bench to faithfully apply
the law.
Ms. Farnandez Stoll was first nominated to serve on the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal circuit more than 7 months ago. Her hearing was
held more than 3 months ago and 2 months ago she was unanimously
reported by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The American Bar
Association's Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary unanimously
rated her ``well qualified'' to serve on the Federal circuit--its
highest possible rating. The Hispanic National Bar Association, the
Federal Circuit Bar Association, and the American Intellectual Property
Law Association strongly support her confirmation. Once confirmed, Ms.
Farnandez Stoll will be the first woman of color to serve on the
Federal circuit. Yet her nomination has been languishing on the Senate
Executive Calendar.
Nearly 6 months into this new Congress, the Republican leadership has
scheduled votes to confirm only 4 district court judges. We have not
confirmed a single judge this work period. Not one. This is simply
unacceptable. In addition to Ms. Farnandez Stoll, there are 11 other
consensus judicial nominations pending on the Senate Executive
Calendar.
The other nominees pending on the calendar include five U.S. Court of
Federal Claims, CFC, nominees. We are well past the 1 year anniversary
of when each were first nominated and are closing in on the anniversary
of all five having had hearings before they were first reported
unanimously out of committee. The five CFC nominees were again reported
out of committee unanimously at the beginning of this year. We have
heard no opposition to any of these nominees, yet they have been in
limbo for months and months because the Republican leader has refused
to schedule a vote. The U.S. Court of Federal Claims is where our
citizens go to seek redress against the Federal Government for monetary
claims. The cases this court hears include claims of unlawful takings
of private land by the U.S. Government without proper compensation
under the fifth Amendment, claims of veterans seeking disability
benefits for combat-related injuries, and vaccine compensation claims.
We are debating trade policy in the Senate, yet the nomination to
fill one of four current vacancies on the U.S. Court of International
Trade--CIT--has sat idle on the Senate Executive Calendar for months.
Like the CFC nominees, the CIT nominee had a hearing last year, was
favorably reported out of the Judiciary Committee unanimously by voice
vote last Congress, and again earlier this year.
Also pending on the calendar are nominees to fill vacancies on the
Western District of Missouri, the Western District of New York, and
three nominees to fill judicial emergency vacancies--two on the Eastern
District of New York and one on the Eastern District of California, all
but one of whom were first nominated last year.
There is nothing keeping the Senate from confirming all 12 nominees--
nothing, except for the mindset of delay for delay's sake, which is
unfortunately the hallmark of the majority's leadership on judicial
nominations.
The Senate has a duty to consider judicial vacancies no matter which
party holds the majority. In the 17 months I chaired the Senate
Judiciary Committee during President Bush's first 2 years in office,
the Senate confirmed 100 Federal circuit and district court judges. I
also served as chairman during the last 2 years of the Bush
administration and we confirmed another 68 district and circuit court
judges.
In contrast to the 4 district judges we have confirmed this year,
when the Democrats were in an equivalent position in the 7th year of
the Bush administration, we had confirmed 18 judges--including 15
district and 3 circuit court judges--by June 24, 2007.
That's 18 judges under a Democratic majority compared to 4 under the
Republican majority. That is nearly five times as many judges confirmed
under a Democratic majority with a President of the opposite party than
today's Senate Republican majority.
Nevertheless, the Republican majority continues to make excuses for
their continued obstruction and delay on confirming President Obama's
judicial nominees. Their excuse is that the Democratic majority was
able to confirm those 18 judges by this date in 2007 only because those
nominees were held over from the previous year. What the Republicans
fail to note is that 6 of the 18 judges confirmed by June 24, 2007
first had their hearing in 2007, were reported out of committee without
needless delay, and were confirmed promptly.
We began this Congress with 38 district and circuit court vacancies,
including 12 vacancies deemed ``judicial emergencies'' by the
nonpartisan Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts. While 38 is the
lowest number of vacancies during the entire Obama administration, it
is still higher than the low of 28 district and circuit court vacancies
during the Bush administration, which was achieved due to Democratic
cooperation.
There are now 55 district and circuit court vacancies, including 27
that have been deemed ``judicial emergency'' vacancies. Of the 55
vacancies, 41 are in States with at least one Republican home State
Senator. Of great concern to the timely administration of justice are
four circuit court vacancies that are ``judicial emergencies''--two in
Texas, one in Alabama, and one in Kentucky--that have each been vacant
and without nominees for well over a year, including one Texas circuit
court vacancy that has been vacant for nearly 3 years. These 3 States
alone also account for 12 district court vacancies without a currently
pending nominee, half of which are ``judicial emergency'' vacancies.
While I know that the senior Senator from Texas, who is also the
assistant republican leader, likes to say that it is the President who
``has to nominate the judges,'' we are all well aware of the central
role home State Senators have in making recommendations to the
President to fill vacancies in our States. I urge all Senators to work
meaningfully with President Obama to get these vacancies filled.
As we head into July 4 recess, the Senate Republican leadership
should be allowing us to clear the calendar of the 12 noncontroversial
consensus judicial nominees to let them get to work for the American
people.
I would remind the current majority leader of his floor remarks from
June
[[Page S4592]]
2008, the last year of the Bush administration when Democrats held the
majority in the Senate:
On the issue of judicial confirmations, my good friend the
majority leader and I discussed this matter publicly at the
beginning of this Congress, and we agreed that President
Bush, in the last 2 years of his term, should be treated as
well as President Reagan, Bush 41, and President Clinton were
treated in the last 2 years of their tenures in office
because there was one common thread, and that was that the
Senate was controlled by the opposition party.
I hope he stays true to the words he spoke when the shoe was on the
other foot. I urge the majority leader to immediately schedule a vote
for Kara Farnandez Stoll and the CFC and CIT nominees so they can get
to work serving the American people.
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