Another of President Obama’s judicial nominees has been shot down, but this time at the hands of progressives rather than conservatives.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, said Monday that there is not enough support from his party on the Judiciary Committee to move forward with the nomination of Michael Boggs, a conservative Democrat from Georgia.
Leahy told the New York Times, “He doesn’t have the votes.”
Obama tapped Boggs for a spot on a U.S. district court as part of a deal with Georgia’s two conservative Republican senators to fill judicial vacancies. It’s a traditional Senate arrangement called the “blue slip” process, which means a state’s senators support or block nominations informally, and Republicans have used the process to torpedo many of Obama’s judicial picks.
But in the end, Boggs’s positions on issues like abortion, gay marriage, and the Confederate flag were too conservative for committee Democrats. Civil rights leaders such as Rep. John Lewis called for President Obama to withdraw Boggs’ nomination back in February, and at a confirmation hearing in May, Boggs faced tough questions from Democrats on his voting record as a Georgia state representative.









