Trump will Nominate Judges Friendly to Him, Biden Wanted Real Judges, Will Get Some
Sen. Joe Manchin (I-W.V.) suggested Thursday that he is open to voting for Democratic judicial nominees, even if they can't secure any Republican support.
Why it matters: Manchin pledged in the past he would only vote for nominees who could get at least one GOP vote. His reversal could be key to Democrats reaching a key milestone on federal judges.
Manchin told Axios that "we're in different times right now" when asked about his previous pledge, adding that "my Republican friends are under the microscope."
Between the lines: With Republicans taking the Senate and White House in 2025, this is last call for Democrats on judges for at least four years.
Manchin's vote is critical for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to confirm nominees in a 51-49 Senate. Judicial confirmations are the top priority for Schumer through the end of the year.
Schumer told Senate Democrats in a private lunch Thursday that he is planning to move on more judges and told his caucus to prepare to be in town for long weeks, sources familiar with the meeting said.
Manchin's position was first reported Thursday on "X" by Semafor's Burgess Everett.
The big picture: One judicial nomination this week got just one Republican vote — Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Ak.) — and Democratic sources have acknowledged they are concered that Republicans could drop all support in the lame-duck session.
Senate Democrats confirmed three federal judges this week, bringing their total under the Biden administration to 215. They also advanced on Thursday two nominees to be considered on the floor. They are chasing the Trump record of 234 confirmations.
Manchin said he would evaluate judges on a case by case basis, but that it was still important to work in a bipartisan manner.
"I'm looking if there is an attempt to try to get a Republican" on each nomination, Manchin said.
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