• 7 months ago
During a press briefing last week, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-NY) celebrated reaching 200 judicial confirmations.

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Transcript
00:00 Okay, first, I want to thank Chairman Durbin and all, it said he's going first, but he
00:09 said I could go first, so I'm thanking them in advance.
00:14 I want to thank you for your great remarks.
00:16 No, it doesn't say that.
00:17 I want to thank Chair Durbin and all of the Senate Democrats on the Judiciary Committee.
00:23 They've done amazing work.
00:25 Dick will get into the details, but this is an incredible milestone.
00:28 This is a great day for America because we have expanded the judiciary.
00:34 We have 200 lifetime appointments, and those are people who are going to really bring more
00:44 justice and more diversity and more credibility to the bench.
00:49 So it's a happy day for America, a very happy day for America.
00:53 200 judges confirmed to lifetime appointments under President Biden and this Democratic
00:59 majority.
01:00 200 judges who are restoring balance and excellence to our courts.
01:05 200 judges increasing the diversity and dynamism of our judiciary.
01:11 And 200 judges who are committed to applying the law fairly and partially and equally.
01:18 You know, in the past, most of the people who got on the bench, or all too many, were
01:23 white, male partners of big, fancy law firms.
01:27 That's changed.
01:28 Of these 200 judges, we are so proud.
01:32 Two-thirds are women, 127.
01:35 Two-thirds are people of color, 125.
01:38 Both have been traditionally underrepresented on the bench.
01:44 We're catching up.
01:45 We've got a ways to go.
01:46 Went to bench for too long.
01:48 Didn't look like America.
01:49 It only looked like a portion of America.
01:52 And now we are expanding to realize that all of America should be on the bench with federal
01:59 judges who have such power.
02:01 We're making our courts look more like America, something we can all be proud of.
02:07 Over twice as many women and three times as many people of color confirmed under the last
02:12 administration.
02:14 More black judges, more Latino judges, more Asian-American judges, the first Muslim-American
02:19 man and woman on the bench, the first Navajo federal judge, and of course, the first black
02:24 woman to sit on the United States Supreme Court, Katonji Brown-Jackson.
02:30 And there's not just demographic diversity.
02:33 There's professional diversity.
02:34 As I said, not just partners in big law firms and prosecutors.
02:38 We have public defenders.
02:39 We have legal aid lawyers.
02:41 We have consumer lawyers, immigration lawyers, lawyers who have represented all kinds of
02:47 people who deserve representation on the bench.
02:52 We've confirmed more judges who are committed to preserving voting rights and upholding
02:57 the rights of workers and families and immigrants.
03:00 We have labor lawyers on the bench too.
03:02 In other words, we've confirmed more judges who embody the very ideal of America, a place
03:09 where rule of law is protected, where the rights of all are honored, and where everyone,
03:14 everyone gets a fair shake.
03:19 And I want to take this opportunity just to talk a little about New York, where I'm very
03:23 proud Senator Gillibrand and I have worked so hard together.
03:27 We have confirmed since President Biden took office, the Senate has confirmed 17 well-qualified
03:34 judges to serve on the federal bench.
03:37 Eunice Lee, the second African-American woman ever to serve on the Second Circuit.
03:42 Nusrat Chowdhury, the first Muslim woman and the first Bangladeshi on the federal bench
03:47 ever.
03:48 Allie Nathan, only the second openly LGBT woman to be confirmed on any circuit court
03:54 and just the fourth gay out of the circuit court judge circuit ever.
03:59 Of our 17 judges in New York, 12 are of our 17 judges in New York, 12 are women, 11 are
04:06 judges of color and come from professions previously unrepresented.
04:11 Dale Ho, one of the brilliant voting rights lawyers in America from the ACLU's Voting
04:16 Rights Project.
04:18 Myrna Perez, daughter of Mexican immigrants from the Brennan Center of Justice, the second
04:24 Hispanic woman to serve on the Second Circuit, the first being Judge Sotomayor.
04:31 Nina Morrison, formerly an attorney for the Innocence Project and one of two openly LGBTQ
04:38 district judges in the Eastern District.
04:41 Finally, the people behind me, led by Chair Durbin, represent tremendous, deserve tremendous
04:47 credit.
04:48 You know, the Judiciary Committee is often a contentious committee.
04:52 We got a couple of the people from the other side who always like to pick fights, but these
04:57 folks have been stalwart, stalwart in sitting through them and making sure these judges
05:04 are confirmed.
05:05 The Judiciary Committee has done an amazing, amazing job.
05:08 I salute them and I want to call on their great leader, Chairman Durbin, to say a few
05:13 words.
05:13 [BLANK_AUDIO]

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