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80 Judicature 274 (1996-1997)
Increasing Senate Scrutiny of Lower Federal Court Nominees

handle is hein.journals/judica80 and id is 276 raw text is: Increasing Senate scrutiny
of lower federal court

nominees
Presidential emphasis on
ideology and diversity
that began with Carter
has led the Senate to act
more cautiously
in confirming district and
appeals court nominees.
by Roger E. Hartley
-       and Usa M. Holmes

The appointment process of
lower federal court judges
has historically never re-
ceived as much attention
and scrutiny as that of Supreme
Court justices. District court and
ROGER E. HARTLEY and LISA M.
HOLMES are Ph.D. candidates in
political science at the University of
Georgia.
courts of appeals vacancies are more
frequent and have been generally
considered less important by the
president, the Senate, and the pub-
lic. All this has begun to change, how-
ever. Lower federal court judges are
274 Judicature Volume 80, Number 6

increasingly viewed as having an im-
portant policy-making function, and
more recent presidents have acted to
shape the bench in their policy im-
age. The long political life of the
lower judiciary is often viewed as an
opportunity to indirectly shape pol-
icy well after a president leaves Penn-
sylvania Avenue.
The political visibility of the lower
federal judiciary can be traced to the
presidency of Richard Nixon, who
promised to selectjudges who placed
a political emphasis on crime con-
trol. Under Jimmy Carter, political
emphasis on the lower judiciary
heightened because hisjudicial selec-
tion plan emphasized appointing mi-

norities and judges with a similar ide-
ology. This increased presidential at-
tention on appointments continued
throughout the 1980s and into the
1990s. Elliot Slotnick argues that
both Carter and Reagan treated
their lower courtjudicial selection re-
sponsibilities as primary domestic
policy making opportunities, and
both presidents generated public
controversy over the clear ideological
A version of this paper was presented at the 1996
Southern Political Science Association meetings
in Atlanta, Georgia. The authors thank Garland
Allison, Michael Giles, Susan Haire,John Maltese,
Susette Talarico, and David Yalof for their insight-
tuil comments. The authors contributed equally to
this study and are in no particular order.

May-June 1997

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