After a year in which Senate Republicans have confirmed Donald Trump’s conservative judicial nominees at a breathtaking pace, three of the president’s nominations have been derailed in just the past week.
Brett Talley withdrew because of his profound lack of qualifications; Jeff Mateer’s nomination ended when senators learned of his bizarre anti-LGBT animus; and yesterday, Matthew Petersen also called it quits.
Matthew Petersen, the judicial nominee who was widely ridiculed last week after a video went viral of him struggling to answer basic legal questions at his Senate confirmation hearing, withdrew from consideration on Monday.
Petersen … said in his withdrawal letter to President Donald Trump that it had “become clear to me over the last few days that my nomination has become a distraction — and that is not fair to you or your Administration.”
Trump nominated Petersen for a seat on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, which carries a lifetime tenure.
Up until recently, Petersen was probably best known for his work opposing many campaign-finance limits as a Bush-appointed commissioner on the Federal Election Commission. Now, however, he’s known as the guy who was quizzed by Sen. John Neely Kennedy (R-La.) about basic procedural questions — and failing miserably to pass that test.
Reflecting on the exchange during a radio interview yesterday, Kennedy said Petersen is a “really smart” and “decent guy,” but added, “[J]ust because you’ve seen ‘My Cousin Vinny’ doesn’t qualify you to be a federal judge.”









