USA Today has a lengthy and
interesting story about the judges that Trump has appointed "flexing their muscles." It starts by saying that their rulings have mostly been conservative (shocker!):
Nearly a year after the first of them won Senate confirmation, 15 nominees have made their way to federal appeals courts, representing perhaps Trump's most significant achievement in his 15 months as president. A dozen more are in the pipeline.
While it's too soon to detect a definitive trend, Trump's judges are making their presence felt through the weight of their votes and the style of their rhetoric.
Judge Amul Thapar of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit led the way last May and has amassed the largest body of work so far. He helped uphold Ohio's method of lethal injection as well as a Michigan county's practice of opening government meetings with Christian prayers.
Judge James Ho, a more recent addition to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, dissented from its refusal to reconsider a challenge to strict campaign contribution limits in Austin, Texas, that he said violate the First Amendment.
Judge Amy Coney Barrett of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals helped block the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's attempt to stop an employer from transferring Chicago-area employees based on their race or ethnicity.
Three judges named by Trump to the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals — Ralph Erickson, Steven Grasz and David Stras — joined in its refusal to reconsider a Missouri inmate's plea to change his method of execution because a rare health condition could make lethal injection too painful. The Supreme Court nevertheless agreed to hear the case next fall.
But then the article explains that it's not always so clear that the judges are going to rule as predicted, and uses an example from the 11th Circuit:
Judge Kevin Newsom of the 11th Circuit joined a
three-judge panel's unanimous ruling that an Alabama police department's
demotion of a female officer seeking to breastfeed her newborn child
was discriminatory. The panel said its holding "will help guarantee
women the right to be free from discrimination in the workplace based on
gender-specific physiological occurrences."
There is no question that Trump, unlike Obama during his presidency, is focused on judicial appointees:
Since coming to office, Trump has nominated
more than 100 federal judges,
and the Senate has confirmed 33. Another 12 circuit court nominees and
58 district court nominees are in the pipeline. The speed and efficiency
of the process far outpaces past Democratic and Republican
administrations.
It helped that Trump inherited
more than 100 lower court vacancies, and that Senate Democrats in 2013
changed that body's rules to block Republicans from bottling up
nominations with just 41 votes. Now
Republicans are in the majority — barely — and have been united on the president's appeals court choices.
Conservatives
have hailed them for their relative youth — Gorsuch is 50, and the 15
appeals court judges average 49 — and their adherence to the
Constitution. Four of them clerked for the Supreme Court's most
conservative justice, Clarence Thomas.
Nearly all are white; four are women.
Included among them are several already being touted by conservatives as
potential Supreme Court nominees, including Barrett and Thapar, who is Indian American.