In theSenate,ablue slipis a slip on which the senators from the state of residence of afederal judicial nomineegive an opinion on the nominee.
Overview
editIn the Senate, a blue slip is an opinion written by asenatorfrom the state where a federal judicial nominee resides. Both senators from a nominee's state are sent a blue slip in which they may submit a favorable or unfavorable opinion of a nominee. They may also choose not to return a blue slip. TheSenate Judiciary Committeetakes blue slips into consideration when deciding whether or not to recommend that the Senate confirm a nominee.
History
editA report issued by the Congressional Research Service in 2003 defines six periods in the use of the blue slip by the Senate:[2]
- From 1917 through 1955: The blue-slip policy allowed home-state senators to state their objections but committee action to move forward on a nomination. If a senator objected to his/her home-state nominee, the committee would report the nominee adversely to the Senate, where the contesting senator would have the option of stating his/her objections to the nominee before the Senate would vote on confirmation.
- From 1956 through 1978: A single home-state senator could stop all committee action on a judicial nominee by either returning a negative blue slip or failing to return a blue slip to the committee. This originated whensegregationistSenatorJames Eastlandof Mississippi allowed nominations to be killed to preventschool integration.[3]
- From 1979 to mid-1989: A home-state senator's failure to return a blue slip would not necessarily prevent committee action on a nominee.
- From mid-1989 through June 5, 2001: In a public letter (1989) on the committee's blue-slip policy, the chairman wrote that one negative blue slip would be "a significant factor to be weighed" but would "not preclude consideration" of a nominee "unless the Administration has not consulted with both home state Senators." The committee would take no action, regardless of presidential consultation, if both home-state senators returned negative blue slips.
- From June 6, 2001, to 2003: The chairman's blue-slip policy allowed movement on a judicial nominee only if both home-state senators returned positive blue slips to the committee. If one home-state senator returned a negative blue slip, no further action would be taken on the nominee.
Since 2003, blue slip policy has changed several more times, as follows:
- 2003 to 2007: A return of a negative blue slip by one or both home-state senators does not prevent the committee from moving forward with the nomination — provided that the Administration has engaged in pre-nomination consultation with both of the home-state senators.[2][4]
- 2007 to January 3, 2018: The chairman's blue-slip policy allowed movement on a judicial nominee only if both home-state senators returned positive blue slips to the committee. If one home-state senator returned a negative blue slip, no further action would be taken on the nominee.[4]
- January 3, 2018, to present: The lack of two positive blue slips will not necessarily preclude a circuit-court nominee from receiving a hearing unless the White House failed to consult with home-state senators. Hearings are unlikely for district court nominees without two positive blue slips.[5][6]
In October 2017,Senate Majority LeaderMitch McConnellannounced that he believed blue slips should not prevent committee action on a nominee.[7]In November 2017, the Chairman of theSenate Judiciary Committee,Chuck Grassley,announced that the committee would hold hearings forDavid StrasandKyle Duncan.Stras's hearing was held up by SenatorAl Franken's refusal to return his blue slip, while Duncan's hearing was held up by SenatorJohn Neely Kennedy's indecision on his blue slip. Kennedy, however, consented to Duncan receiving a hearing.[8][9]
In February 2019, attorneyEric Millerwas confirmed to serve on theNinth Circuit Court of Appeals,despite the fact that neither of his two home-state senators (Patty MurrayandMaria Cantwell,both ofWashington) had returned blue slips for him.[10]He was the first federal judicial nominee to be confirmed without support from either of his home-state senators, although other nominees were similarly confirmed to the Courts of Appeals without blue slips later in 2019, includingPaul Matey(Third Circuit,New Jersey),Joseph F. BiancoandMichael H. Park(bothSecond Circuit,New York), andKenneth K. Lee,Daniel P. Collins,andDaniel Bress(allNinth Circuit,California). By the end of Trump's tenure, 17 judges were appointed despite resistance from at least one senator of that state. In the Biden presidency, the Democrat-led Senate did not return to the blue slip, but only three appellate judges were confirmed with opposition.[11]In the closing months of the 118th Congress, multiple Democrats signaled a willingness to return to the policy before the next Congress convenes with some reluctant concurrence by senior Republicans.[12]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^Kratz, Jessie (2014-08-03)."The Origins of Senatorial Courtesy".Prologue: Pieces of History.US National Archives.Retrieved2016-03-18.
- ^abSollenberger, Mitchel A."The History of the Blue Slip in the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 1917-Present".Congressional Research Service.Retrieved25 January2021.
- ^The Editorial Board (2023-02-06)."Opinion | How to Stop a Senator From Blocking a Federal Judge".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Retrieved2023-02-07.
- ^abRizzo, Salvador (21 February 2018)."Are Senate Republicans killing 'blue slip' for court nominees?".Retrieved5 July2018.
- ^Grassley, Chuck (22 February 2018)."Chuck Grassley: Senate Democrats are trying to stall Trump's nominations by rewriting the history of 'blue slips'".Retrieved5 July2018.
- ^LeVine, Marianne (February 17, 2021)."Senate Dems take a page from GOP in judicial nominee battles".POLITICO.RetrievedFebruary 18,2021.
- ^Rowland, Geoffrey (2017-10-11)."Senate battle heats up over 'blue slips,' Trump court picks".The Hill.Retrieved2017-10-11.
- ^Demir gian, Karoun (2017-11-17)."Sen. Chuck Grassley schedules a hearing for contentious Trump judicial nominees".The Washington Post.Retrieved2017-11-17.
- ^Stole, Bryn (2017-11-14)."Sen. John Kennedy keeping mum on nomination of conservative Kyle Duncan to 5th Circuit judgeship".The Advocate.Retrieved2017-11-17.
- ^"'Damaging precedent': Conservative federal judge installed without consent of home-state senators ".The Washington Post.2019.
- ^Tierney, Sneed (August 28, 2024)."Scale of Trump's appeals court overhaul unmatched by Biden, even as Democrats could approve more total judges".CNN Politics.
- ^Jennifer, Haberkorn (May 15, 2024)."Durbin says he's open to reinstating rule that could slow judicial confirmations".Politico.
External links
edit- "Judicial Nominations".U.S. Department of Justice.U.S. Department of Justice Office of Legal Policy. December 2021.