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Trump delivers profanity, below-the-belt digs at Catholic charity banquet; Poll finds Harris leads among Black voters in key states; Puerto Rican parish leverages solar power to build climate resilience hub; TN expands SNAP assistance to residents post-Helene; New report offers solutions for CT's 'disconnected' youth.

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Longtime GOP members are supporting Kamala Harris over Donald Trump. Israel has killed the top Hamas leader in Gaza. And farmers debate how the election could impact agriculture.

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New rural hospitals are becoming a reality in Wyoming and Kansas, a person who once served time in San Quentin has launched a media project at California prisons, and a Colorado church is having a 'Rocky Mountain High.'

Rapid Confirmations Reshaping Judicial Branch

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Monday, January 13, 2020   

FRANKFORT, Ky. -- Over the past few years, the U.S. Senate has confirmed 185 of President Donald Trump's judicial nominees, the majority of whom have a conservative track record.

Along with two Supreme Court justices, senators have confirmed 50 circuit court and 133 district court judges.

According to States Newsroom reporter Allison Stevens, who has covered politics for nearly a decade, the sheer number of conservative confirmations amounts to what some are calling a repeal of progressive reforms that hearken back to the New Deal.

"And what President Trump is doing, and Mitch McConnell is supporting and doing in the Senate, is supporting hundreds of conservative judges, who oppose a lot of progressive reforms, throughout the country," Stevens explains.

The Senate recently confirmed University of Louisville law professor Justin Walker as federal judge for Kentucky's Western District.

Stevens says Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell regularly speaks in public about his goal of filling all of the remaining vacancies left on the federal judiciary.

"But I don't think it's something that the media pays much attention to, and I don't think it's something that the public really cares all that much about, for the most part," Stevens states.

Stevens says groups such as the American Constitution Society and the Alliance for Justice are trying to change that.

"They're trying to call attention to the impact that these judges have on so many aspects of daily life, but in general, they do sort of fly under the radar," she points out.

According to the American Constitution Society, more than 70 vacancies on district and circuit courts have yet to be filled.


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