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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 December 27, 2024 to January 2, 2025.
Vacancies
- Dec. 31, 2024: Judge Charles R. Wilson of the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court that will be filled by his appointed successor, Embry Jerode Kidd.
- Dec. 31, 2024: Judge Lorna Gail Tiangco Schofield of the Southern District of New York assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court.
- Dec. 31, 2024: Chief Judge Catherine Diane Caldwell Eagles of the Middle District of North Carolina assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court.
- Dec. 31, 2024: Judge Loretta Yvonne Copeland Biggs of the Middle District of North Carolina assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court.
- Jan. 1, 2024: Judge Steve CarMichael Jones of the Northern District of Georgia assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court.
- Jan. 1, 2025: Judge William Edward Smith of the District of Rhode Island assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court.
- Jan. 2, 2024: Judge Lawrence Scott Coogler of the Northern District of Alabama resigned, opening up a vacancy on the court.
- Jan. 2, 2024: Judge Andrew Scott Hanen of the Southern District of Texas assumed senior status, opening up a vacancy on the court.
45 vacancies remain on the federal judiciary, a number unchanged from a week ago.
Retirements, Deaths, and Resignations
Jan. 2, 2024: Judge Lawrence Coogler of the Northern District of Alabama resigned.
Other
Judges Seated
- Jan. 2, 2025: Melissa Raye DuBose received her commission to serve as a Judge of the District of Rhode Island.
With DuBose’s seating, the District of Rhode Island has now formed a Democratic majority.
Chief Judges
- Dec. 31, 2024: Judge William Lindsay Osteen Jr. becomes the Chief Judge of the Middle District of North Carolina. He is succeeding Judge Catherine Eagles, who assumed senior status the same day.
Analysis
Happy New Year, everyone! The New Year has brought with it a whole spate of judges taking senior status, as is the case with any new year. When you next read this article, the new Senate will have convened on the noon of January 3rd, ushering in a new Republican Senate majority for at least the next two years, and likely longer.
We are not likely to see the first judicial appointments of the second Trump administration for some months, if not longer. Historically, presidents do not make their first appointment until at least March of their first year. Biden made his first nominations on April 19 of 2021; Trump made his first nomination on March 21, 2017; and Obama made his first nominations on April 2, 2009.
Though, considering that Trump is known to defy norms, I would not be surprised to see an earlier nomination date.
Following the 2024 Senate elections, Republicans now control both Senate seats in Montana, Ohio, and West Virginia, and control one of two Senate seats in Pennsylvania. This is important considering that district court nominees require the approval of both Senators from the state where a given district court is located before being considered.
Montana, Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania are all states which will likely gain Republican majorities in the next four years. All four states either already have pending vacancies (such as Ohio and Montana) or have elderly judges who are eligible for seniority or close to eligibility.
I would look at the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, which has a number of Obama judges in their 60’s, and the Southern District of West Virginia, whose three Democratic judges are all senior eligible, as prime targets.
The Southern District of West Virginia is especially likely to flip given the advanced age of the remaining Democratic judges (two of whom are Clinton appointees), and may become an entirely Republican court before Trump’s term is even up.
The biggest issue for me to look out for is if the blue slip tradition will even remain in place. So far, both Republican and Democratic administrations have required all district nominees to receive the approval of both home state Senators. But will that come to an end?
The incoming Senate Judiciary Chairman, Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, says he is not abandoning the blue slip. But Grassley ended the blue slip for circuit nominees in 2018, and the last four years of the Biden presidency have seen pressure on now-Ranking Member Democrat Dick Durbin of the Judiciary Committee and Biden to end the blue slip.
Should Grassley end the blue slip tradition for district court nominees, it will empower the President of the United States and greatly expedite the judicial nominations process. No matter if a state is Democratic or Republican, the President will now be able to appoint whatever judges they wish, so long as the Senate advises, and consents.
SIGN-OFF
That’s it for this week’s The Judiciary at Noon. This has been Anthony Myrlados.


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