Biden unveils 2nd batch of diverse judiciary nominees - Los Angeles Times
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Biden announces another batch of diverse judiciary nominees

President Biden at the White House
President Biden at the White House on Tuesday.
(Evan Vucci / Associated Press)
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President Biden on Thursday announced another diverse group of candidates for his second batch of judicial nominations, a day after some in his first slate appeared before a Senate committee.

The new batch consists of three nominees: a woman who would be the first Asian American appointed as a federal judge to the Western District of Washington; a Latino who is currently the presiding judge of the Grant County Superior Court in Ephrata, Wash.; and a woman who is a longtime labor and employment litigation attorney in New Jersey.

Democrats, who narrowly control the Senate for the first time in eight years, are eager to turn the page from the Trump administration, especially when it comes to judges. More than one-quarter of the federal judiciary is made up of former President Trump’s appointees. Most notably, Biden’s Republican predecessor named three conservative justices to the Supreme Court.

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Biden’s latest nominees include two appointments to the Western District of Washington, which covers Seattle, Tacoma and Olympia. One is David Estudillo, the presiding judge of the Grant County Superior Court in Ephrata. He has been a superior court judge since 2015 and is the president of the Washington State Superior Court Judges’ Assn. In private practice he focused on immigration and civil litigation.

The other nominee is Tana Lin, with the firm Keller Rohrback since 2004, focusing on representing employees and shareholders in antitrust litigation. From 2001 through 2003, she was the litigation coordinator at the Michigan Poverty Law Firm. She received her law degree from New York University School of Law in 1991.

Biden has also nominated Christine O’Hearn for the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey. She’s been a partner at Brown & Connery since 1993, focusing on labor and employment litigation, and has also been a law professor at Rutgers University School of Law. She earned her law degree from Temple University James E. Beasley School of Law in 1993.

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Progressives worry Dianne Feinstein wouldn’t be as aggressive in approving judges as Republicans have been during the Trump presidency.

“Christine O’Hearn is a highly successful and regarded trial attorney with the intellect, thoughtfulness and temperament needed to be a brilliant federal judge, and I am proud to have recommended her for appointment to the U.S District Court of New Jersey,†Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) said in a statement.

There currently are 78 judicial vacancies, according to the judiciary’s website. Biden has already nominated 11 people. The Senate, which must confirm the nominees, is split 50-50, with Vice President Kamala Harris called on to break any tie votes.

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday heard from five nominees from Biden’s first batch of picks, with Ketanji Brown Jackson attracting most of the attention. She is a federal judge in the District of Columbia, and Biden wants her promoted to the appeals court seat left vacant when Merrick Garland became his attorney general.

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Biden has promised to name a Black woman to the Supreme Court if a vacancy arises, and Jackson is widely seen as a potential pick down the line.

Administration officials emphasized the speed with which Biden is announcing nominees, stressing that the president was out of the gate with names faster than his immediate predecessors.

The White House said in a statement that all the candidates were “immensely qualified and devoted to the rule of law and our Constitution.â€

“These candidates also speak to the president’s strong belief that the federal judiciary should reflect the proud diversity of the nation, both in terms of personal and professional backgrounds,†it said.

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