Two weeks after Democrats gloated over the guilty verdict of former President Donald Trump, six Senate Republicans are vowing to exact revenge for the Biden administration’s use of lawfare to target a political opponent.
Their target: 44 nominees of President Joe Biden who are awaiting Senate confirmation.
The six GOP senators—JD Vance of Ohio, Mike Lee of Utah, Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, Roger Marshall of Kansas, and Eric Schmitt of Missouri—joined forces Thursday with a commitment to block confirmation of the nominees.
Tuberville, who last year delayed the promotions of military officers over a dispute with the Biden administration, is now using his ability as a senator to stop the Democrat-led chamber from swiftly confirming Biden’s nominees.
This time, he’ll have more Republicans to back him up.
“Every signer is pledged to defend against attempts to fast-track the confirmation of Biden nominees,” the senators wrote in their letter. “This will be accomplished through a joint effort and not be reliant upon a single Member’s willingness to hold every nominee.”
They added:
In a continuing response to the current administration’s persecution of President Donald Trump, we will not allow the fast-tracking of any Biden Article III court judicial nominees, as well as Biden U.S. attorney nominations.
Further, we will not permit the fast-tracking of nominees who have suggested the Trump prosecutions were reasonable, endorsed President Trump’s guilt in these sham proceedings, joined or supported organizations that celebrated the indictment of President Trump, supported the ‘get-Trump’ candidacy of Alvin Bragg, or supported lawfare or censorship in other ways.
This complement to the pledge of May 31 will last until Election Day, when the American people will have the opportunity to decisively reject attempts to settle political disputes through the legal system.
That earlier pledge, issued shortly after a New York jury’s guilty verdict of Trump, promised to oppose Democrats’ legislative priorities and nominations.
The new effort puts the focus on the following 44 nominees awaiting confirmation.
- Johnny C. Gogo, nominated to be a U.S. attorney for the Districts of Guam and Northern Mariana Islands
- April M. Perry, nominated to be a U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Illinois
- Joshua S. Levy, nominated to be a U.S. attorney for the District of Massachusetts
- Rebecca C. Lutzko, nominated to be a U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Ohio
- Matthew L. Gannon, nominated to be a U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Iowa
- David C. Waterman, nominated to be a U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa
- Joseph Russell Palmore, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Court of Appeals
- Carmen G. Iguina Gonzalez, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Court of Appeals
- John Cuong Truong, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Superior Court
- Rahkel Bouchet, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Superior Court
- Ray D. McKenzie, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Superior Court
- Erin Camille Johnston, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Superior Court
- Sherri Malloy Beatty-Arthur, nominated to be an associate judge for the DC Superior Court
- Anne Hwang, nominated to be a judge for the Central District of California
- Cynthia Valenzuela Dixon, nominated to be a judge for the Central District of California
- Michelle Williams Court, nominated to be a judge for the Central District of California
- Stacey D. Neumann, nominated to be a judge for the District of Maine
- Adam B. Abelson, nominated to be a judge for the District of Maryland
- Danna R. Jackson, nominated to be a judge for the District of Montana
- Embry J. Kidd, nominated to be a judge for the 11th Circuit
- Joseph Francis Saporito, Jr., nominated to be a judge for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
- Rebecca Suzanne Kanter, nominated to be a judge for the Southern District of California
- Detra Shaw-Wilder, nominated to be a judge for the Southern District of Florida
- Sarah Netburn, nominated to be a judge for the Southern District of New York
- Meredith A. Vacca, nominated to be a judge for the Western District of New York
- Julia M. Lipez, nominated to be a judge for the 1st Circuit
- Mary Kay Lanthier, nominated to be a judge for the District of Vermont
- Catherine Henry, nominated to be a judge for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- Karla M. Campbell, nominated to be a Judge for the 6th Circuit
- Charlie Crist, nominated to be the U.S. representative to the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization
- Corey Anne Tellez, nominated to be deputy undersecretary for the Department of the Treasury
- Andrew William Plitt, nominated to be an assistant administrator of the Agency for International Development
- James J. Blanchard, nominated to be a member of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy
- Margaret L. Taylor, nominated to be a legal advisor for the Department of State
- Jay T. Snyder, nominated to be a member of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy
- John Gleeson, nominated to be a Member of the U.S. Sentencing Commission
- Christopher H. Schroeder, nominated to be a member of the Board of Trustees of the James Madison Memorial Fellowship Foundation
- Leslie N. Bluhm, nominated to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Corporation for National and Community Service
- Jeffrey R. Gural, nominated to be chairman of the Public Buildings Reform Board
- Martin Joseph Walsh, nominated to be governor of the U.S. Postal Service
- John Bradford Wiegmann, nominated for general counsel of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence
- Barbara Lee, nominated to be representative to the General Assembly of the United Nations
- Vivek Hallegere Murthy, nominated to be representative of the United States on the Board of the World Health Organization
- Janet Louise Yellen, nominated to be governor of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, governor of the Inter-American Development Bank, governor of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development and governor of the International Monetary Fund