For the third time in about as many weeks, Republicans have filibustered one of President Obama’s nominees to the influential DC Circuit Court of appeals.
After filibustering experienced Supreme Court litigator Patricia Millett and Georgetown Law professor Cornelia Pillard, Senate Republicans blocked district court judge Robert Wilkins Monday, fulfilling their goal of not allowing a single one of Obama’s recent nominees to the DC Circuit make it to the bench. Obama has seen far more of his nominees blocked than either of the two presidents who came before him, as Republicans have deployed the filibuster to prevent Obama from shifting the federal bench to the left.
“Four of my predecessor’s six nominees to the D.C. Circuit were confirmed,” Obama noted in a statement following the vote. “Four of my five nominees to this court have been obstructed.”
Senate Republicans have come up with a long list of excuses for engaging in conduct they angrily denounced as unconstitutional when George W. Bush was in office. They’ve said Obama is trying to “pack the court” with ideologues, even though the president is merely filling vacancies, not altering the number of seats on the bench. They’ve argued that the DC Circuit, which hears many high profile regulatory and national security cases, is underworked even though it has a similar caseload to when Bush was making appointments to the court. In moments of honesty, they’ve simply admitted that they’d just rather the influential court stay skewed to the right.
Speaking on the Senate floor Monday evening, Iowa Republican Senator Chuck Grassley came up with a new one: this whole nominating judges thing is just an attempt by the Democratic Party to distract from the difficulties the administration has been having in implementing the Affordable Care Act.









