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Welcome to The Judiciary at Noon! Take a break from work to get an update on the oft-neglected third branch of the United States government, the judicial branch.
The series covers any updates to the federal judiciary, including any new judges confirmed, any deaths, resignations, or retirements from the courts, and any new vacancies that have occurred. It includes political analysis at the very end. All information spans the previous week.
Confirmations
No judges were confirmed for the week spanning August 23 to 29, 2024.
Vacancies
No vacancies occurred for the week spanning August 23 to 29, 2024.
70 vacancies remain on the federal judiciary, a number unchanged from a week ago.
Retirements, Deaths, and Resignations
No federal judges retired, died, or resigned in the week of August 16 to 22, 2024.
Other
- Aug. 28, 2024: President Biden announced three new nominees to federal district courts, one each to the Northern District of New York, District of New Mexico, and District of Arizona.
Analysis
No major action, and don’t expect any for another two weeks. The Senate reconvenes on September 9th, and their first action will be to confirm two judges, a sign that judicial confirmations will be a major priority for the Democrat-controlled Senate going forward.
Observers like myself wondered if Biden would announce any new nominees this week, and he did indeed. This means we are likely seeing one of the last set of nominees of the Biden presidency.
There are just five judgeships left without a nominee in states with two Democratic Senators; three if you count Sarah Netburn, who was not reported out of committee, and Rebecca Suzanne Kanter, whose nomination was announced months ago but has yet to appear before the Senate.
We should not expect any new vacancies to occur for Biden to fill. No vacancy has been announced for a month and a half, and at this point in the year, any vacancy that is announced will likely not have a nominee, or won’t have a nominee that will appear before the Senate in time.
There are still over thirty vacancies without nominees, but they are in states where one or both Senators are Republican, and Republicans have not been cooperative with Biden on many nominees, especially during an election year. With these two factors in mind, it is clear that Biden is quickly approaching a hard limit on judicial nominations in his presidency.
Best-case scenario, Democrats could be looking at thirty-seven nominees that can be voted on by year’s end. If the Democratic Senate manages to pull off confirming them all, Biden will have appointed 242 federal judges, surpassing his predecessor Donald Trump, who appointed 234 judges.
SIGN-OFF
That’s it for this week’s The Judiciary at Noon. This has been Anthony Myrlados. I’ll see you next noon and until then I wish you all an enjoyable weekend.


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