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Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2022: Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary Committee, and the President

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Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2020:
March 8, 2022
Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary
Barry J. McMillion
Committee, and the President
Analyst in American
National Government
2022: Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary Committee, and the President Updated January 14, 2026 (RL33225) Jump to Main Text of Report

Contents

Summary

The process of appointing Supreme Court Justices has undergone changes over two centuries, but
The process of appointing Supreme Court Justices has undergone changes over two centuries, but

its most basic feature, the sharing of power between the President and Senate, has remained its most basic feature, the sharing of power between the President and Senate, has remained
unchanged. To receive a lifetime appointment to the Court, a candidate must, under the unchanged. To receive a lifetime appointment to the Court, a candidate must, under the

"Appointments ClauseAppointments Clause" of the Constitution, first be nominated by the President and then of the Constitution, first be nominated by the President and then
confirmed by the Senate. A key role also has come to be played midway in the process by the Senate Judiciary Committee.confirmed by the Senate. A key role also has come to be played midway in the process by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Table 1 of this report lists and describes actions taken by the Senate, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the President on of this report lists and describes actions taken by the Senate, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the President on
all Supreme Court nominations, from 1789 through all Supreme Court nominations, from 1789 through 20202022. The table provides the name of each person nominated to the Court . The table provides the name of each person nominated to the Court
and the name of the President making the nomination. It also tracks the dates of formal actions taken, and time elapsing and the name of the President making the nomination. It also tracks the dates of formal actions taken, and time elapsing
between these actions, by the Senate or Senate Judiciary Committee on each nomination, starting with the date that the between these actions, by the Senate or Senate Judiciary Committee on each nomination, starting with the date that the
Senate received the nomination from the President.Senate received the nomination from the President.
Of the Of the 4445 Presidents Presidents in the history of the United Statesof the United States to date, 42, 41 have made nominations to the Supreme Court. have made nominations to the Supreme Court. TheyAltogether, these Presidents made a total made a total
of 164of 165 nominations nominations to the Court, of which , of which 127 (77%) received Senate confirmation128 (78%) were confirmed by the Senate. Also, on 12 occasions in the nation. Also, on 12 occasions in the nation's history, s history,
Presidents have made temporary recess appointments to the Court, without first submitting nominations to the Senate. Of the Presidents have made temporary recess appointments to the Court, without first submitting nominations to the Senate. Of the
37 unsuccessful Supreme Court nominations, 11 were rejected in Senate roll37 unsuccessful Supreme Court nominations, 11 were rejected in Senate roll- call votes, 11 were withdrawn by the President, call votes, 11 were withdrawn by the President,
and 15 lapsed at the end of a session of Congress. Six individuals whose initial nominations were not confirmed were later and 15 lapsed at the end of a session of Congress. Six individuals whose initial nominations were not confirmed were later
renominated and confirmed to positions on the Court.renominated and confirmed to positions on the Court.
A total of A total of 121122 of the of the 164165 nominations were referred to a Senate committee, with nominations were referred to a Senate committee, with 120121 of them to the Judiciary Committee of them to the Judiciary Committee
(including almost all nominations since 1868). Prior to 1916, the Judiciary Committee considered these nominations behind (including almost all nominations since 1868). Prior to 1916, the Judiciary Committee considered these nominations behind
closed doors. Since 1946, however, almost all nominees have received public confirmation hearings. Most recent hearings closed doors. Since 1946, however, almost all nominees have received public confirmation hearings. Most recent hearings
have lasted four or more days.have lasted four or more days.
In recent decades, from the late 1960s to the present, the Judiciary Committee has tended to take more time before starting In recent decades, from the late 1960s to the present, the Judiciary Committee has tended to take more time before starting
hearings and casting final votes on Supreme Court nominations than it did previously. The median time taken for the full hearings and casting final votes on Supreme Court nominations than it did previously. The median time taken for the full
Senate to take final action on Supreme Court nominations also has increased in recent decades, dwarfing the median time Senate to take final action on Supreme Court nominations also has increased in recent decades, dwarfing the median time
taken on earlier nominations.taken on earlier nominations.
On January 27, 2022, Justice Stephen Breyer announced his intention to vacate his seat on the Supreme Court at the end of its
current term (assuming his successor has been nominated and confirmed). On February 28, 2022, President Biden formally
nominated Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to fill the anticipated vacancy created by Justice Breyer’s announced retirement.
The information presented in this report is current through the confirmation of Justice Amy Coney Barrett in 2020 and will be
updated upon confirmation of Justice Breyer’s successor.

The information presented in this report is current through the confirmation of Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022.

For additional perspectives on actions taken on Supreme Court nominations, in earlier historical periods as well as in the For additional perspectives on actions taken on Supreme Court nominations, in earlier historical periods as well as in the
modern era, see CRS Report R44235, modern era, see CRS Report R44235, Supreme Court Appointment Process: President's Selection of a Nominee; CRS Report ; CRS Report
R44236, R44236, Supreme Court Appointment Process: Consideration by the Senate Judiciary Committee; CRS Report R44234, ; CRS Report R44234,
Supreme Court Appointment Process: Senate Debate and Confirmation Vote; CRS Report R44773, ; CRS Report R44773, The Scalia Vacancy in
Historical Context: Frequently Asked Questions
; CRS Insight IN11514, ; CRS Insight IN11514, Supreme Court Vacancies That Occurred During
Presidential Election Years (1789-2020)
, by Barry J. McMillion; CRS Insight IN11519, , by Barry J. McMillion; CRS Insight IN11519, Final Action by the Senate on
Supreme Court Nominations During Presidential Election Years (1789-2020)
, by Barry J. McMillion; and CRS Report , by Barry J. McMillion; and CRS Report
R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court Nominations: In Brief, by Valerie Heitshusen.

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Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Description of Report’s Contents .................................................................................................... 1
Findings from the Nominations Table ............................................................................................. 3
Number of Nominations and Nominees .................................................................................... 3
Presidents Who Made the Nominations .................................................................................... 3
Date That Nominations Were Received in Senate..................................................................... 4
Referral of Nominations to Senate Judiciary Committee .......................................................... 5
Nominations That Received Public Confirmation Hearings ..................................................... 6
Advent of Public Hearings .................................................................................................. 6
Length of Hearings in Days ................................................................................................ 8
Nominations Reported Out of Committee to Full Senate ......................................................... 8
Reporting ............................................................................................................................ 8
Reporting with a Favorable Recommendation.................................................................... 9
Reporting Without Recommendation.................................................................................. 9
Reporting with an Unfavorable Recommendation .............................................................. 9

Nominations Not Reported Out of Committee ......................................................................... 9
Senate Cloture Votes on Nominations ..................................................................................... 10
Final Action by the Senate or the President ............................................................................ 12
Days from Date of Senate Receipt of Nomination to First Hearing........................................ 14
Days from Senate Receipt to Final Committee Vote ............................................................... 15
Days from Senate Receipt to Final Senate or Presidential Action .......................................... 16
Recess Appointments to the Supreme Court ........................................................................... 18
Concluding Observations .............................................................................................................. 19

Tables
Table 1. Nominations to the Supreme Court of the United States, 1789-2020.............................. 21
Table 2. Senate Votes on Whether to Confirm Supreme Court Nominations: Number
Made by Voice Vote/Unanimous Consent (UC) or by Roll-Call Vote ........................................ 48

Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 48

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Introduction
R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court Nominations: In Brief, by Valerie Heitshusen.

Introduction

The procedure for appointing a Justice to the Supreme Court of the United States is provided for The procedure for appointing a Justice to the Supreme Court of the United States is provided for
by the Constitution in by the Constitution in only a few words. The a few words. The "Appointments ClauseAppointments Clause" (Article II, Section 2, clause (Article II, Section 2, clause
2) states that the President 2) states that the President "shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the
Senate, shall appoint ... Judges of the supreme Court.Senate, shall appoint ... Judges of the supreme Court." The process of appointing Justices has The process of appointing Justices has
undergone changes over two centuries, but its most basic feature—the sharing of power between undergone changes over two centuries, but its most basic feature—the sharing of power between
the President and Senate—has remained unchanged. To receive a lifetime appointment to the the President and Senate—has remained unchanged. To receive a lifetime appointment to the
Court, a candidate must first be nominated by the President and then confirmed by the Senate. An Court, a candidate must first be nominated by the President and then confirmed by the Senate. An
important role also has come to be played midway in the process (after the President selects, but important role also has come to be played midway in the process (after the President selects, but
before the Senate considers) by the Senate Judiciary Committee.before the Senate considers) by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
On rare occasions, Presidents also have made Supreme Court appointments without the SenateOn rare occasions, Presidents also have made Supreme Court appointments without the Senate’s
's consent, when the Senate was in recess. Such consent, when the Senate was in recess. Such "recess appointments,recess appointments," however, were temporary, however, were temporary,
with their terms expiring at the end of the Senatewith their terms expiring at the end of the Senate's next session. The last recess appointments to s next session. The last recess appointments to
the Court were made in the 1950s.the Court were made in the 1950s.
The need for a Supreme Court nomination arises when a vacancy occurs or is scheduled to occur The need for a Supreme Court nomination arises when a vacancy occurs or is scheduled to occur
on the Court.on the Court.11 The most recent The most recent Court vacancy to be included in this report was created by the
death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg on September 18, 2020. In response to Justice Ginsburg’s death, on
September 29, 2020, President Donald Trump nominated Amy Coney Barrett, a sitting judge on
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, to replace Justice Ginsburg. It was the 164th
time a President of the United States has nominated someone to be a Supreme Court Justice.
The Barrettvacancy to be included in this report occurred in 2022 when Justice Stephen Breyer stepped down from the Court upon the nomination and confirmation of his successor, Ketanji Brown Jackson. The Jackson nomination was the 165th instance of a President nominating an individual to be a Supreme Court Justice. The Jackson nomination received four days of confirmation hearings, after which the Senate nomination received four days of confirmation hearings, after which the Senate
Judiciary Committee, on Judiciary Committee, on October 22, 2020April 4, 2022, by a vote of , by a vote of 12-0, favorably reported11-11, failed to report the nomination the nomination
to the Senate. The committee vote on the Barrett nomination was boycotted by the 10 Democratic
Senators on the committee, resulting in the absence of recorded “nay” votes on the nomination.
Following three days of floor debate and a 51-48 vote, on October 25,favorably to the Senate. Under temporary procedures that applied when the Senate was evenly divided between the two political parties in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), the Senate discharged the Judiciary Committee from consideration of the nomination on April 4, 2022, by a vote of 53-47. This placed the nomination on the Executive Calendar in the same status as if it had been reported.2 On April 7, 2022, following floor debate and a 53-47 vote to close debate on the to close debate on the
Jackson nomination, the Senatenomination, the Senate, on October 26, confirmed Judge confirmed Judge BarrettJackson to the Court, by a to the Court, by a 52-4853-47 vote. vote.
In the past, most, but not all, Supreme Court nominations have received Senate confirmation. In the past, most, but not all, Supreme Court nominations have received Senate confirmation.
From the first appointments in 1789, the Senate has confirmed From the first appointments in 1789, the Senate has confirmed 127128 out of out of 164165 Court nominations. Court nominations.
Of the 37 unsuccessful nominations, 11 were rejected in Senate rollOf the 37 unsuccessful nominations, 11 were rejected in Senate roll- call votes, while most of the call votes, while most of the
rest, in the face of committee or Senate opposition to the nominee or the President, were rest, in the face of committee or Senate opposition to the nominee or the President, were
withdrawn by the President, or were postponed, tabled, or never voted on by the Senate. The 37 withdrawn by the President, or were postponed, tabled, or never voted on by the Senate. The 37
unconfirmed nominations, however, unconfirmed nominations, however, includedalso include those of six individuals who were later renominated those of six individuals who were later renominated
and confirmed.and confirmed.
Description of Report's Contents
This report lists and describes actions taken by the Senate, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and This report lists and describes actions taken by the Senate, the Senate Judiciary Committee, and
the President on all Supreme Court nominations, from 1789 to the President on all Supreme Court nominations, from 1789 to 2020. The listing appears in a
Supreme Court nominations table, Table 1, later in this report. Preceding the table is summary
text, which highlights certain nominations statistics derived from the table. The text also provides
historical background information on the Supreme Court appointment process and uses

1 A CRS report in March 2017 noted that since President George Washington’s initial six appointments to the Supreme
Court in 1789 and 1790, “a vacancy on the Court has occurred on average every two years. During the post-War period
(1946 to the present), a vacancy on the Court has occurred on average every 2.4 years. In more recent years (since
1980), a vacancy has occurred on average slightly less frequently (every 3.1 years).” CRS Report R44773, The Scalia
Vacancy in Historical Context: Frequently Asked Questions
, by Barry J. McMillion.
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nominations statistics from the table to shed light on ways in which the appointment process has
evolved over time. Many of the statistical findings discussed, for example, provide historical
perspective on the emergence, and then increased involvement, of the Senate Judiciary
Committee in the appointment process.
Specifically, the table lists,2022. These actions are listed in Table 1 of the report.3 Specifically, the table lists the following for each Supreme Court nomination through for each Supreme Court nomination through 2020, the following:
2022:name of the person nominated (the nominee);name of the person nominated (the nominee);
name of the President who made the nomination;name of the President who made the nomination;
date the nomination was made by the President and received in the Senate;date the nomination was made by the President and received in the Senate;2
4 date(s) of any committee hearings held on the nomination that were open to the date(s) of any committee hearings held on the nomination that were open to the
public;public;
type and date of final committee action; andtype and date of final committee action; and
type and date of final action by the Senate or, in rarer instances, by the President type and date of final action by the Senate or, in rarer instances, by the President
(when the final action taken on a nomination was its withdrawal by the (when the final action taken on a nomination was its withdrawal by the
President).President).
Table 1 also shows the speed with which certain actions were taken on nominations, specifically also shows the speed with which certain actions were taken on nominations, specifically
presenting the number of days that elapsed from the date a nomination was formally received in presenting the number of days that elapsed from the date a nomination was formally received in
the Senate until the following:the Senate until the following:
the first day of public confirmation hearings (if any);the first day of public confirmation hearings (if any);
the date of final committee action (if any); andthe date of final committee action (if any); and
the date of final Senate action or presidential withdrawal of the nomination.the date of final Senate action or presidential withdrawal of the nomination.
The table also lists all recess appointments to the Supreme Court, as well as the later nomination The table also lists all recess appointments to the Supreme Court, as well as the later nomination
of each recess appointee. As well, it identifies five occasions (the earliest in 1968, the latest in of each recess appointee. As well, it identifies five occasions (the earliest in 1968, the latest in
20202022) on which motions have been made in the Senate to bring debate on Supreme Court ) on which motions have been made in the Senate to bring debate on Supreme Court
nominations to a close.nominations to a close. Table 1 providesTable 1, it should be emphasized, tracks the dates of formal actions taken the dates of formal actions taken
by the President, the Senate, and the Senate Judiciary Committee on each Supreme Court by the President, the Senate, and the Senate Judiciary Committee on each Supreme Court
nomination. The table, for example, records the dates that nominations were actually made and nomination. The table, for example, records the dates that nominations were actually made and
transmitted by the President to the Senate. The table, however, does not track the dates on which transmitted by the President to the Senate. The table, however, does not track the dates on which
Presidents learned of prospective Court vacancies or announced their intention to nominate Presidents learned of prospective Court vacancies or announced their intention to nominate
someone to be a Justice.someone to be a Justice.
Actions by the full Senate tracked systematically Actions by the full Senate tracked systematically inin Table 1 are those on which the Senate took are those on which the Senate took
final action (ordinarily in the form of confirmation, and less often in the form of rejecting, action (ordinarily in the form of confirmation, and less often in the form of rejecting,
tabling, or postponing action on a nomination). For certain Supreme Court nominations,tabling, or postponing action on a nomination). For certain Supreme Court nominations, Table 1
also provides dates of procedural actions taken on the Senate floor, prior to or after final Senate also provides dates of procedural actions taken on the Senate floor, prior to or after final Senate
action, in order to put the final action in fuller context. The table, however, does not account for action, in order to put the final action in fuller context. The table, however, does not account for
all Senate procedural actions on, or for all dates of Senate floor consideration of, Supreme Court all Senate procedural actions on, or for all dates of Senate floor consideration of, Supreme Court
nominations.nominations.
In listing all persons ever nominated to the Supreme Court,In listing all persons ever nominated to the Supreme Court, Table 1 includes the names of those includes the names of those
who were not confirmed as well as those who were confirmed but did not assume their appointive

2 Usually the date on which the President formally makes a nomination, by signing a nomination message, is the same
as the date on which the nomination is received in the Senate. In Table 1, these two dates are the same for any given
nomination when only one date is shown in the “Date received in Senate” column. However, for a nomination made by
a President on a date prior to the nomination’s receipt by the Senate, the earlier presidential nomination date is
distinguished, in parentheses, from the date when the nomination was received by the Senate.
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office.3 A list solely of the 115 individuals who assumed office and served on the Court (with
judicial oath dates and service termination dates for each Justice) is available on the Court’s
website.4
who were not confirmed as well as those who were confirmed but did not assume their appointive office.5 Findings from the Nominations Table
Number of Nominations and Nominees
Table 1
lists all lists all 164165 Supreme Court nominations from 1789 to Supreme Court nominations from 1789 to 2020.2022.6 Each of the Each of the 164165 nominations nominations
entailed a President signing a nomination message, which was then transmitted to, and received entailed a President signing a nomination message, which was then transmitted to, and received
by, the Senate. A lesser number of separate individuals, by, the Senate. A lesser number of separate individuals, 145146, were actually nominated to the , were actually nominated to the
Court, with some of them nominated more than once.Court, with some of them nominated more than once.5
7 Of the Of the 164165 total nominations to the Court, 22 were to the position of Chief Justice and the other total nominations to the Court, 22 were to the position of Chief Justice and the other
142143 to a position as Associate Justice. The 22 Chief Justice nominations involved 20 persons to a position as Associate Justice. The 22 Chief Justice nominations involved 20 persons
nominated once, and one person nominated twice.nominated once, and one person nominated twice.68 The The 142143 Associate Justice nominations Associate Justice nominations
involved involved 125126 persons nominated once, 7 persons nominated twice, and 1 person nominated three persons nominated once, 7 persons nominated twice, and 1 person nominated three
times.times.
Presidents Who Made the Nominations
Of the Of the 44 Presidents in the history of the United States, 4145 Presidents to date, 42 have made nominations to the have made nominations to the
Supreme Court.Supreme Court.79 These These 4142 are listed in the second column of are listed in the second column of Table 1. All but All but one1 of the of the 41
42 Presidents succeeded in having at least one Supreme Court nomination confirmed by the Senate. The one exception was President Andrew Johnson, whose only nomination to the Court, the nomination Presidents succeeded in having at least one Supreme Court nomination receive Senate

3 Table 1 identifies eight Supreme Court nominees who subsequent to Senate confirmation did not assume the office to
which they had been appointed: Seven declined the office, and one died before assuming it. It should be noted,
however, that one of the seven who declined the office, William Cushing—confirmed to be Chief Justice in 1796—was
at the time serving on the Court as an Associate Justice, and continued to serve in that capacity until 1810. Another of
the seven, John Jay—confirmed to be Chief Justice in 1800—had served earlier on the Court, as the Court’s first Chief
Justice, from 1789 to 1795.
4 The list, available at http://www.supremecourt.gov/about/members_text.aspx, presents first the names of 17 persons
who have served as Chief Justice, followed by the 103 persons who have served as Associate Justices. The listing of
120 names in all (17 + 103) includes those of five Chief Justices who earlier had served as Associate Justices, hence
reducing to 115 the total number of persons who have served as members of the Court.
5 Specifically, eight persons were nominated twice to the same Court position (seven to be Associate Justice, one to be
Chief Justice); one person was nominated three times to be Associate Justice; and nine persons were nominated first to
be Associate Justice and later to be Chief Justice. The sum of 19 (the number of Court nominations that were not a
person’s first nomination to the Court) and 145 (the number of persons nominated to the Court at least once) is 164
(total Supreme Court nominations).
6 The nation’s first Chief Justice, John Jay, was nominated to that position twice. Jay was first nominated, and
confirmed, in September 1789. He resigned as Chief Justice in 1795 to serve as governor of New York. In December
1800, Jay was nominated and confirmed a second time as Chief Justice, but declined the appointment. For analysis of
the process by which a Chief Justice is appointed, accompanied by a list of all Chief Justice nominations from 1789 to
the present (including the nomination, confirmation, judicial oath, and end-of-service dates of Chief Justice nominees,
as well as their ages at time of appointment and upon termination of service), see archived CRS Report RL32821, The
Chief Justice of the United States: Responsibilities of the Office and Process for Appointment
, by Denis Steven Rutkus
and Lorraine H. Tong.
7 The three Presidents not to have made any Supreme Court nominations were William Henry Harrison, Zachary
Taylor, and Jimmy Carter, with no Court vacancies having occurred while they were in office. While it may be
unremarkable that no vacancies occurred during the short-lived presidencies of Harrison (March 4 to April 4, 1841) and
Taylor (March 5, 1849 to July 9, 1850), Jimmy Carter’s presidency (January 20, 1977 to January 20, 1981) is notable
as the only one lasting a full term during which no Supreme Court vacancies occurred.
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confirmation. The one exception was President Andrew Johnson, whose only Court nomination,
of Henry Stanbery in 1866, was thwarted when the Senate enacted legislation eliminating the of Henry Stanbery in 1866, was thwarted when the Senate enacted legislation eliminating the
Associate Justice position to which Stanbery Associate Justice position to which Stanbery had been nominated.8
Aswas nominated.10 As Table 1 shows, the number of nominations made to the Supreme Court has varied greatly shows, the number of nominations made to the Supreme Court has varied greatly
from President to Presidentacross presidencies. For any given President, the number of nominations will be affected . For any given President, the number of nominations will be affected
by various factors, including the length of time the President was in office, the number of by various factors, including the length of time the President was in office, the number of
vacancies occurring on the Court during that presidency, and whether more than one nomination vacancies occurring on the Court during that presidency, and whether more than one nomination
was required to fill a Court vacancy due to a previous nominationwas required to fill a Court vacancy due to a previous nomination's failure to be confirmed. s failure to be confirmed.
Examination of the nominations to the Court for each President reveals thatOverall, slightly less than half slightly less than half
of the Presidents (21 of of the Presidents (21 of 4445) made four or more nominations, while slightly more than half () made four or more nominations, while slightly more than half (2324 of of
4445) made three or fewer. Likewise, slightly less than half of the Presidents (again, 21 of ) made three or fewer. Likewise, slightly less than half of the Presidents (again, 21 of 4445) saw ) saw
three or more of their Court nominations confirmed, while slightly more than half (again, three or more of their Court nominations confirmed, while slightly more than half (again, 2324 of of
4445) saw two or fewer confirmed.) saw two or fewer confirmed.
The President with the most Supreme Court nominations and confirmations was George The President with the most Supreme Court nominations and confirmations was George
Washington with 14 nominations, 12 of which were confirmed.Washington with 14 nominations, 12 of which were confirmed.911 The two Presidents with the The two Presidents with the
second-largest number of Court nominations were John Tyler and Franklin D. Roosevelt, with second-largest number of Court nominations were John Tyler and Franklin D. Roosevelt, with
nine each. nine each. Only oneOne of Tyler of Tyler's nine nominationss nine nominations, however, received Senate confirmation, while received Senate confirmation, while
all nine of FDRall nine of FDR's were confirmed.s were confirmed.
The President with the largest number of Supreme Court confirmations in one term (apart from The President with the largest number of Supreme Court confirmations in one term (apart from
the first eight of George Washingtonthe first eight of George Washington's nominations—all in his first term, and all confirmed) was s nominations—all in his first term, and all confirmed) was
William Howard Taft, who, during his four years in office, made six Court nominations, all of William Howard Taft, who, during his four years in office, made six Court nominations, all of
which were confirmed. which were confirmed. Six Presidents made Six Presidents made only one Supreme Court nomination each, with the one Supreme Court nomination each, with the
nominations of five of these Presidents receiving confirmation.nominations of five of these Presidents receiving confirmation.1012 And, as noted above, three of the And, as noted above, three of the
nation’s 44nation's 45 Presidents were unable to make a single nomination to the Court, because no Presidents were unable to make a single nomination to the Court, because no
vacancies occurred on the Court during their presidencies.vacancies occurred on the Court during their presidencies.
Date That Nominations Were Received in Senate
The Supreme Court appointment process officially begins when the President signs a message to The Supreme Court appointment process officially begins when the President signs a message to
the Senate nominating someone for appointment to the Court. Usually on the date of the signing, the Senate nominating someone for appointment to the Court. Usually on the date of the signing,
the message is delivered to the Senate and recorded in the Senate Executive Journal as having

8 See Myron Jacobstein and Roy M. Mersky, The Rejected (Milpitas, CA: Toucan Valley Publications, 1993), pp. 69-
74. (Hereinafter cited as Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected.)
9 President Washington, early in his first term of office, was presented with the opportunity to make six Supreme Court
nominations, as the Judiciary Act of 1789 (1 Stat. 73 (1789)) set the number of Justice positions on the newly
established Court at six. On September 24, 1789, the President nominated six persons to the Court, and two days later
the Senate voted for their confirmation. However, one of the confirmed nominees, Robert Harrison of Maryland,
declined the appointment, resulting in President Washington, in 1790, making a seventh nomination, of James Iredell of
North Carolina, whose confirmation by the Senate put the six-member Court at full strength. Subsequently during the
Washington presidency, four vacancies occurred on the Court, which resulted in the President making seven more
nominations. Four of these seven nominations were confirmed by the Senate, with the nominees accepting their
appointments to the Court. The other three nominations involved the first of two nominations of William Paterson of
New Jersey in 1793 (who, after his first nomination was withdrawn, was renominated by President Washington and
confirmed), John Rutledge of South Carolina (whose nomination in 1795 to be Chief Justice was rejected by the
Senate), and William Cushing of Massachusetts (whose nomination in 1796 to be Chief Justice was confirmed by the
Senate, but who declined the appointment).
10 The five Presidents whose single Supreme Court nominations received Senate confirmation were Franklin Pierce,
James A. Garfield, William McKinley, Calvin Coolidge, and Gerald R. Ford. As mentioned above, the one President
whose single Supreme Court nomination did not receive confirmation was Andrew Johnson.
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the message is delivered to the Senate and recorded in the Senate Executive Journal as having been received that day.been received that day.1113 However, in 31 instances (all but two prior to the However, in 31 instances (all but two prior to the 20th20th century), Supreme century), Supreme
Court messages were recorded in the Court messages were recorded in the Senate Executive Journal as received in the Senate on a day as received in the Senate on a day
after they were signed by the President—usually the next day. Inafter they were signed by the President—usually the next day. In Table 1, inin the the "Date received in Date received in
Senate”Senate" column, a second date is provided in parentheses (as the column, a second date is provided in parentheses (as the "Nom. dateNom. date"), whenever a ), whenever a
President made a nomination on a day prior to its receipt by the Senate.President made a nomination on a day prior to its receipt by the Senate.
Referral of Nominations to Senate Judiciary Committee
Although referral of Supreme Court nominations to the Senate Judiciary Committee is now Although referral of Supreme Court nominations to the Senate Judiciary Committee is now
standard practice, such referrals were not always the case.standard practice, such referrals were not always the case. Table 1 shows that shows that 121 of 164
122 of 165 Supreme Court nominations have been referred to a Senate committee, Supreme Court nominations have been referred to a Senate committee, 120 of themof which 121 were referred to the to the
Judiciary Committee.Judiciary Committee.
The first standing legislative committees of the Senate, including the Judiciary Committee, were The first standing legislative committees of the Senate, including the Judiciary Committee, were
created in 1816. Only once previously was a Supreme Court nomination referred to committee, created in 1816. Only once previously was a Supreme Court nomination referred to committee,
when, in 1811, the Senate referred the nomination of Alexander Wolcott to a select committee of when, in 1811, the Senate referred the nomination of Alexander Wolcott to a select committee of
three Members. For roughly half a century after the Judiciary Committeethree Members. For roughly half a century after the Judiciary Committee's creation, nominations, s creation, nominations,
rather than being automatically referred to the committee, were referred by motion only. From rather than being automatically referred to the committee, were referred by motion only. From
1816 to 1868, more than two-thirds of the nominations (26 out of 38 nominations), were referred 1816 to 1868, more than two-thirds of the nominations (26 out of 38 nominations), were referred
to the committee. During this period, the confirmation success rate was roughly the same for to the committee. During this period, the confirmation success rate was roughly the same for
nominations referred, 15 of 26, as it was for those not referred, 7 out of 12.nominations referred, 15 of 26, as it was for those not referred, 7 out of 12.
In 1868, Senate rules were changed to provide that all nominations be referred to appropriate In 1868, Senate rules were changed to provide that all nominations be referred to appropriate
standing committees, unless otherwise ordered by the Senate.standing committees, unless otherwise ordered by the Senate.1214 Subsequently, from 1868 to the Subsequently, from 1868 to the
present day, present day, 9495 of of 100101 Supreme Court nominations have been referred to the Judiciary Supreme Court nominations have been referred to the Judiciary
Committee. The six nominations not referred to committee were of persons who, at the time of Committee. The six nominations not referred to committee were of persons who, at the time of
their nomination, were a former President, a Senator, a former Senator, an Attorney General and their nomination, were a former President, a Senator, a former Senator, an Attorney General and
former U.S. Representative, a former Secretary of War, or a sitting Associate Justice,former U.S. Representative, a former Secretary of War, or a sitting Associate Justice,1315 and all and all
were easily confirmed. The last Supreme Court nomination not referred to the Judiciary were easily confirmed. The last Supreme Court nomination not referred to the Judiciary
Committee was that of Senator James Committee was that of Senator James F. Byrnes in 1941. The Senate by unanimous consent Byrnes in 1941. The Senate by unanimous consent
considered and confirmed the Byrnes nomination, without referral to committee, on the day it considered and confirmed the Byrnes nomination, without referral to committee, on the day it
received the nomination from the President.

11 A President may announce the selection of a nominee well before transmitting a nomination message to the Senate.
For instance, President George W. Bush announced his selection of Samuel A. Alito Jr. to be a Supreme Court nominee
on October 31, 2005, but formally signed and transmitted the nomination of Alito to the Senate on November 10, 2005.
For a complete list, from 1900 to 2009, of the dates on which Presidents announced their Supreme Court nominees (as
distinguished from when they signed and transmitted nomination documents to the Senate), see archived CRS Report
RL33118, Speed of Presidential and Senate Actions on Supreme Court Nominations, 1900-2010, by R. Sam Garrett and
Denis Steven Rutkus.
12 See U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, History of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States
Senate, 1816-1981.
Sen. Doc. No. 97-18, 97th Cong., 1st sess. (Washington: GPO, 1982), p. iv; also, U.S. Senate,
History of the Committee on Rules and Administration—United States Senate, prepared by Floyd M. Riddick,
Parliamentarian Emeritus of the Senate, 96th Cong., 1st sess., S. Doc. No. 96-27 (Washington: GPO, 1980). Riddick
provides, on pp. 21-28, the full text of the general revision of the Senate rules, adopted in 1868, including, on p. 26, the
following rule: “When nominations shall be made by the President of the United States to the Senate, they shall, unless
otherwise ordered by the Senate, be referred to appropriate committees.... ”
13 The nominations from 1868 to the present not referred to the Judiciary Committee were those of: Edwin M. Stanton
in 1869 (at time of nomination, former Secretary of War); Edward D. White in 1894 (Senator); Edward D. White again,
in 1910, this time to be Chief Justice (Associate Justice at time of nomination, and former Senator); William Howard
Taft in 1921 (former President); George Sutherland in 1922 (former Senator); and James F. Byrnes in 1941 (Senator).
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received the nomination from the President. Nominations That Received Public Confirmation Hearings14
Hearings16 Table 1
, inin the the "Public hearing date(s)Public hearing date(s)" column, lists dates on which the full Judiciary column, lists dates on which the full Judiciary
Committee, or a Judiciary subcommittee, held public confirmation hearings on Supreme Court Committee, or a Judiciary subcommittee, held public confirmation hearings on Supreme Court
nominations. Included in this listing are public sessions of the committee at which either Supreme nominations. Included in this listing are public sessions of the committee at which either Supreme
Court nominees testified on their own behalf and/or outside witnesses testified for or against the Court nominees testified on their own behalf and/or outside witnesses testified for or against the
nominees.nominees.
Advent of Public Hearings
Before 1916, the Judiciary Committee considered Supreme Court nominations behind closed Before 1916, the Judiciary Committee considered Supreme Court nominations behind closed
doors. Thus, until that year, there are no entries in the doors. Thus, until that year, there are no entries in the "Public hearing date(s)Public hearing date(s)" column. Rather, column. Rather,
committee sessions on Court nominations typically were limited to committee members committee sessions on Court nominations typically were limited to committee members
discussing and voting on a nominee in executive session, without hearing testimony from outside discussing and voting on a nominee in executive session, without hearing testimony from outside
witnesses.witnesses.1517 In 1916, for the first time, the committee held open confirmation hearings on a In 1916, for the first time, the committee held open confirmation hearings on a
Supreme Court nomination—that of Louis Supreme Court nomination—that of Louis D. Brandeis to be an Associate Justice—at which Brandeis to be an Associate Justice—at which
outside witnesses (but not the nominee) testified. More days of public hearings (19) were held on outside witnesses (but not the nominee) testified. More days of public hearings (19) were held on
the Brandeis nomination than on any Supreme Court nomination since. The Brandeis hearings, the Brandeis nomination than on any Supreme Court nomination since. The Brandeis hearings,
however, did not set immediately into place a new policy of open confirmation hearings for however, did not set immediately into place a new policy of open confirmation hearings for
Supreme Court nominations, since each of the next six nominations (during the years 1916 to Supreme Court nominations, since each of the next six nominations (during the years 1916 to
1923) was either considered directly by the Senate, without referral to the Judiciary Committee, 1923) was either considered directly by the Senate, without referral to the Judiciary Committee,
or was acted on by the committee without the holding of confirmation hearings.or was acted on by the committee without the holding of confirmation hearings.
From 1925 to 1946, public confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominations became the From 1925 to 1946, public confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominations became the
more common, if not invariable, practice of the Judiciary Committee. In 1925, Harlan more common, if not invariable, practice of the Judiciary Committee. In 1925, Harlan F. Stone Stone
became the first Supreme Court nominee to appear in person and testify at his confirmation became the first Supreme Court nominee to appear in person and testify at his confirmation
hearings.hearings.1618 During the next two decades, the Stone nomination was one of 11 Court nominations During the next two decades, the Stone nomination was one of 11 Court nominations
that received public confirmation hearings before either the full Judiciary Committee or a that received public confirmation hearings before either the full Judiciary Committee or a
Judiciary subcommittee,Judiciary subcommittee,1719 while five other nominations did not receive public hearings. One of the five nominees not receiving a public confirmation hearing was Senator James Byrnes, while five other nominations did not receive public hearings. One of

14 For a historical overview of public hearings on Supreme Court nominations submitted to the Senate, see CRS Insight
IN10476, Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings for Supreme Court Nominations: Historical Overview and Data, by
Barry J. McMillion (out of print; available to congressional clients from the author upon request).
15 At least once in the 19th century, however, in 1873, the Judiciary Committee did hear witnesses testify concerning a
Supreme Court nomination—that of George H. Williams to be Chief Justice—but these two days of hearings, on
December 16 and 17, 1873, were held in closed session. The closed-door sessions were held to examine documents and
hear testimony from witnesses relevant to a controversy that arose over the Williams nomination only after the
committee had reported the nomination to the Senate. The controversy prompted the Senate to recommit the
nomination to the Judiciary Committee and to authorize the committee “to send for persons and papers.” U.S.
Congress, Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, vol. 19
(Washington: GPO, 1901), p. 189. After holding the two closed-door sessions on December 16 and 17, the committee
did not re-report the nomination to the Senate. Amid press reports of significant opposition to the nomination both in
the Judiciary Committee and the Senate as a whole, the nomination, at Williams’s request, was withdrawn by President
Ulysses S. Grant on January 8, 1874. See Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected, pp. 82-87.
16 For a discussion of the advent of Supreme Court nominee appearances before the Senate Judiciary Committee,
starting with Harlan F. Stone in 1925 (and carrying through the nominations of Abe Fortas and Homer Thornberry in
1968), see, James A. Thorpe, “The Appearance of Supreme Court Nominees Before the Senate Judiciary Committee,”
Journal of Public Law, vol. 18, 1969, pp. 371-402.
17 A scholar examining the procedures followed by the committee in its consideration of 15 Supreme Court
nominations referred to it between 1923 and 1946 found that, with two exceptions—the nominations of Charles Evans
Hughes in 1930 and Harold H. Burton to be Associate Justices in 1945—all of the nominations were first “processed by
a subcommittee prior to consideration by the full committee membership.” David Gregg Farrelly, “Operational Aspects
of the Senate Judiciary Committee,” (Ph.D. diss., Princeton University: 1949), pp. 184-185. (Hereinafter cited as
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the five nominees not receiving a public confirmation hearing was Senator James F. Byrnes,
whose nomination in 1941, as noted earlier, was considered directly by the Senate without whose nomination in 1941, as noted earlier, was considered directly by the Senate without
referral to the Judiciary Committee.referral to the Judiciary Committee.18
20 Not indicated in the Not indicated in the "Public hearing date(s)Public hearing date(s)" column is the precise length (in minutes or hours) of column is the precise length (in minutes or hours) of
each public hearing session. The hearing sessions for a few Supreme Court nominations during each public hearing session. The hearing sessions for a few Supreme Court nominations during
the 1925 to 1946 period lasted for hours, extending over several days;the 1925 to 1946 period lasted for hours, extending over several days;1921 others, however, were others, however, were
brief and perfunctory in nature, held only long enough to accommodate the small number of brief and perfunctory in nature, held only long enough to accommodate the small number of
witnesses who wished to testify against a nominee.witnesses who wished to testify against a nominee.20
22 From Tom From Tom C. Clark’Clark's appointment in 1949 through the s appointment in 1949 through the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett in
2020appointment of Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022, all but 4 of , all but 4 of 4041 Supreme Court nominations have received public confirmation hearings Supreme Court nominations have received public confirmation hearings
before the Senate Judiciary Committee or a before the Senate Judiciary Committee or a Judiciaryjudiciary subcommittee. subcommittee.2123 The first of the four The first of the four
exceptions involved the 1954 nomination of John exceptions involved the 1954 nomination of John M. Harlan II, made less than a month before the Harlan II, made less than a month before the
final adjournment of a Congress. At the beginning of the next Congress, however, Harlan was final adjournment of a Congress. At the beginning of the next Congress, however, Harlan was
renominated, and hearings were held on that nomination.renominated, and hearings were held on that nomination.2224 The second and third exceptions The second and third exceptions
involved the Associate Justice nominations of John involved the Associate Justice nominations of John G. Roberts Jr. and Harriet Roberts Jr. and Harriet E. Miers in 2005, Miers in 2005,
both of which were withdrawn by the President before the scheduled start of confirmation both of which were withdrawn by the President before the scheduled start of confirmation
hearings. Robertshearings. Roberts, however, was renominated, this time to be Chief Justice, and hearings were was renominated, this time to be Chief Justice, and hearings were
held on that nomination. The fourth and most recent exception, in the presidential election year of held on that nomination. The fourth and most recent exception, in the presidential election year of
2016, involved the nomination of Merrick 2016, involved the nomination of Merrick B. Garland. No hearings were held on the nomination

Farrelly, “Operational Aspects.”)
18 The four other nominations not receiving public confirmation hearings even though referred to the Judiciary
Committee were of former New York governor and former Supreme Court Associate Justice Charles Evans Hughes in
1930, former federal prosecutor Owen J. Roberts in 1930, Senator Hugo L. Black in 1937, and Senator Harold H.
Burton in 1945.
Farrelly, in “Operational Aspects,” also lists the Supreme Court nomination of former Michigan governor Frank
Murphy in 1940 as one not receiving a confirmation hearing. Farrelly notes, at pp. 191-192, that the Senate Judiciary
subcommittee which first processed the nomination “voted against public hearings.” That vote notwithstanding, the
nominee voluntarily appeared before the subcommittee on January 11, 1940, in a public session at which four Senators
“all questioned Mr. Murphy about his views of the Constitution and the duties of a Supreme Court Justice.” “Senate
Body Backs Murphy for Court,” New York Times, January 12, 1940, p. 1. Based on this and other similar newspaper
accounts of the subcommittee session, January 11, 1940 is listed below, in Table 1, as a public hearing date for the
Murphy nomination.
19 See, in Table 1, the multiple hearing days for the nominations of Felix Frankfurter in 1939 and Robert H. Jackson in
1941.
20 For example, a Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the 1932 nomination of Benjamin N. Cardozo lasted only five
minutes, during which one witness testified in opposition. Likewise, when the Judiciary Committee extended open
invitations for witnesses to testify in opposition at the confirmation hearings for Stanley F. Reed in 1938, William O.
Douglas in 1939, Harlan F. Stone (for Chief Justice) in 1941, Wiley B. Rutledge in 1943, and Fred M.Vinson (for Chief
Justice) in 1946, no witnesses appeared to protest against Douglas or Stone, and “only one or two persons filed protests
in each case against Reed, Vinson and Rutledge.” Farrelly, “Operational Aspects,” pp. 194-195.
21 The last Supreme Court nomination on which a Senate Judiciary subcommittee held hearings was the 1954
nomination of Earl Warren to be Chief Justice. The subcommittee held public hearings on the nomination on February
2 and 19, 1954, after which the full committee, on February 24, 1954, voted to report the nomination favorably. All
subsequent hearings on Supreme Court nominations were held by the full Judiciary Committee.
22 The Judiciary Committee held two days of confirmation hearings on the second Harlan nomination, on February 24
and 25, 1955. The February 24 session, held in closed session, heard the testimony of nine witnesses (seven in favor of
confirmation, and two opposed). Luther A. Huston, “Harlan Hearing Held by Senators,” New York Times, February 25,
1955, p. 8. The committee also began the February 25 hearing in closed session, to hear the testimony of additional
witnesses. However, for Judge Harlan, who was the last scheduled witness, the committee “voted to open the hearing to
newspaper reporters for his testimony.” Luther A. Huston, “Harlan Disavows ‘One World’ Aims in Senate Inquiry,”
New York Times, February 26, 1955, p. 1.
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Garland. No hearings were held on the nomination after the Senate majority leader and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee both took the after the Senate majority leader and chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee both took the
position that the person to fill the Scalia vacancy be one selected by the next President taking position that the person to fill the Scalia vacancy be one selected by the next President taking
office on January 20, 2017.office on January 20, 2017.23
25 Length of Hearings in Days
The number of days given to public confirmation hearings has varied greatly from one Supreme The number of days given to public confirmation hearings has varied greatly from one Supreme
Court nomination to another, particularly in recent decades. Following the 19 days of hearings Court nomination to another, particularly in recent decades. Following the 19 days of hearings
held on the Brandeis nomination in 1916, Court nominations through the Associate Justice held on the Brandeis nomination in 1916, Court nominations through the Associate Justice
nomination of Abe Fortas in 1965 typically received either one or two days of hearings. However, nomination of Abe Fortas in 1965 typically received either one or two days of hearings. However,
from 1967 through the present, from 1967 through the present, 2021 of the of the 2627 Court nominations which advanced through the Court nominations which advanced through the
hearings stage received four or more days of open confirmation hearings. Additionally, 4 of the hearings stage received four or more days of open confirmation hearings. Additionally, 4 of the
2027 nominations received 11 or more days of hearings, nominations received 11 or more days of hearings,2426 while one nomination received eight days while one nomination received eight days
of hearings.of hearings.2527 By contrast, only 3 of the By contrast, only 3 of the 2627 nominations received two or fewer days of hearings. nominations received two or fewer days of hearings.26
28 Nominations Reported Out of Committee to Full Senate
Supreme Court nominations referred to the Judiciary Committee have almost always Supreme Court nominations referred to the Judiciary Committee have almost always
subsequently been reported to the Senate. If a majority of its members oppose confirmation of a subsequently been reported to the Senate. If a majority of its members oppose confirmation of a
Supreme Court nominee, the committee technically may vote against reporting the nomination Supreme Court nominee, the committee technically may vote against reporting the nomination
(although(although Table 1 shows no instances of the committee ever doing this). The committee might shows no instances of the committee ever doing this). The committee might
also simply decide not to consider or vote on a nomination. also simply decide not to consider or vote on a nomination. Failure to report Failure to report a nomination would prevent the would prevent the
full Senate from considering the nominee, unless the Senate were able to undertake successfully
the discharge of the committee. Table 1, however, shows that instances of the committee not
reporting have been rare. Of the 120 Supreme Court nominations referred to the Judiciary
Committee, 111 were reported to the Senate.27 The committee has reported these nominations in
the following four ways.
Reporting
For most of the first five decades in which the Judiciary Committee considered Supreme Court
nominations (1828 to 1863), its usual practice was simply to report these nominations to the
Senate, without any official indication of the committee members’ opinions regarding them.
Twenty-three nominations were reported to the Senate in this way, and 15 of them were
confirmed.

23 See CRS Report R44773, The Scalia Vacancy in Historical Context: Frequently Asked Questions, by Barry J.
McMillion. See also letter by majority members of the Senate Judiciary Committee to the Senate majority leader
expressing unanimous agreement that there be no hearings on any Supreme Court nominee until after the next President
was sworn in on January 20, 2017, at https://www.grassley.senate.gov/news/news-releases/judiciary-committee-
republicans-mcconnell-no-hearings-supreme-court-nomination; also, Dave Boyer, “Grassley Reiterates No Hearing
Stance in Garland Meeting,” The Washington Times, April 13, 2016, p. A5.
24 These were the nominations of Robert H. Bork in 1987 (12 hearing days), Clarence Thomas in 1991 (11 days), and
Abe Fortas and Homer Thornberry in 1968 (11 days for their joint hearings).
25 In 1969, eight days of confirmation hearings were held on the nomination of Clement F. Haynsworth.
26 One day of hearings each was held on the nominations of Warren E. Burger (to be Chief Justice) in 1969 and Harry
A. Blackmun in 1970, while two days of hearings were held on the nomination of Antonin Scalia in 1986.
27 As noted earlier, only once prior to the establishment of the Judiciary Committee in 1816 was a Supreme Court
nomination referred to committee, and that nomination was reported to the Senate as well. See, in Table 1, the
nomination in 1811 of Alexander Wolcott, which was considered by a select committee and then reported to the Senate,
where it was rejected by a 9-24 vote.
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Reporting with a Favorable Recommendation
full Senate from considering the nominee, unless the Senate were able to successfully discharge the committee from consideration of the nomination. This occurred in 2022 when the Senate Judiciary Committee failed, by a tied vote of 11-11, to report favorably the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson. Under temporary procedures that applied when the Senate was evenly divided between the two political parties in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), the Senate discharged the Judiciary Committee from consideration of the nomination on April 4, 2022, by a vote of 53-47. Note that this placed the Jackson nomination on the Executive Calendar in the same status as if it had been reported by the committee. Table 1 shows that instances of the committee not reporting a nomination have been rare. Of the 121 Supreme Court nominations referred to the Judiciary Committee, 111 were reported to the Senate.29 The committee has reported these nominations in the following four ways. Reporting

For most of the first five decades in which the Judiciary Committee considered Supreme Court nominations (1828 to 1863), its usual practice was simply to report these nominations to the Senate, without any official indication of the committee members' opinions regarding them. Twenty-three nominations were reported to the Senate in this way, and 15 (65%) of them were confirmed.

Reporting with a Favorable Recommendation
In 1870, the Judiciary Committee initiated the practice of reporting to the Senate an explicit In 1870, the Judiciary Committee initiated the practice of reporting to the Senate an explicit
recommendation in favor of confirmation whenever a majority of members supported a Supreme recommendation in favor of confirmation whenever a majority of members supported a Supreme
Court nominee. Over the course of almost a century and a half, the committee has favorably Court nominee. Over the course of almost a century and a half, the committee has favorably
reported 77 Supreme Court nominations, with 71 reported 77 Supreme Court nominations, with 71 (92%) receiving Senate confirmation.receiving Senate confirmation.28
30 Reporting Without Recommendation
On four occasions—three times in the late On four occasions—three times in the late 19th19th century and once in the late century and once in the late 20th20th century—the century—the
Judiciary Committee has voted to report a Supreme Court nomination while explicitly stating it Judiciary Committee has voted to report a Supreme Court nomination while explicitly stating it
was not making a recommendation to the Senate. On each occasion, the committee reported a was not making a recommendation to the Senate. On each occasion, the committee reported a
nomination without urging the Senate either to confirm or to reject.nomination without urging the Senate either to confirm or to reject.2931 The Senate confirmed three The Senate confirmed three
(75%) of the nominations that were reported in this way, while rejecting the fourth.of the nominations that were reported in this way, while rejecting the fourth.30
32 Reporting with an Unfavorable Recommendation
On seven occasions—five times in the On seven occasions—five times in the 19th19th century and twice in the century and twice in the 20th20th century—the Judiciary century—the Judiciary
Committee voted to report a Supreme Court nomination with a recommendation to the Senate that Committee voted to report a Supreme Court nomination with a recommendation to the Senate that
it reject the nomination. Only two it reject the nomination. Only two (29%) of the seven nominations received Senate confirmation (and of the seven nominations received Senate confirmation (and
each only by a close rolleach only by a close roll- call vote);call vote);3133 the Senate rejected four of the the Senate rejected four of the others32others34 and postponed taking and postponed taking
action on the fifth.action on the fifth.33
35 Nominations Not Reported Out of Committee
Of the Of the 120121 Supreme Court nominations referred to the Judiciary Committee since its Supreme Court nominations referred to the Judiciary Committee since its
establishment, establishment, 910 (8%) were not reported by the committee to the Senate. were not reported by the committee to the Senate.3436 Although six of the nominees were never confirmed to the Court,37 the other four ultimately were—three after being renominated and one after the Senate discharged the committee from consideration of the nomination.38 Senate Cloture Votes on Nominations Although six of the

28 The six favorably reported nominations which failed to receive Senate confirmation involved these nominees:
George H. Williams, for Chief Justice, in 1873 (nomination withdrawn); Caleb Cushing, in 1874 (nomination
withdrawn); Pierce Butler in 1922 (no action taken by Senate); Abe Fortas, for Chief Justice, in 1968 (nomination
withdrawn); Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. in 1969 (rejected by Senate); and G. Harrold Carswell in 1970 (rejected by
Senate). Butler, it should be noted, was renominated and confirmed.
29 A report that states it is not accompanied by a recommendation can be a way to alert the Senate that a substantial
number of committee members have some reservations about the nominee which, however, do not rise, at that point, to
the level of opposition; it might also be a way to bridge or downplay differences between committee members who
favor confirmation and other members who oppose it. The latter, for example, was said to be the purpose for the
Judiciary Committee in 1888 reporting the Chief Justice nomination of Melville W. Fuller without recommendation;
the action was described in a news account as a “compromise between the Democratic minority who desired a report to
the Senate in favor of confirmation, and the Republican majority, who desired to defeat the nomination.... ” “Mr.
Fuller’s Nomination,” Washington Post, July 3, 1888, p. 1.
30 The three nominees confirmed by the Senate after the Judiciary Committee explicitly reported their nominations
without recommendation were: Melville W. Fuller, for Chief Justice, in 1888; George Shiras Jr. in 1892; and Clarence
Thomas in 1991. A fourth nomination reported without recommendation, Wheeler H. Peckham, in 1894, was rejected
by the Senate.
31 See, in Table 1, the second nomination of Stanley Matthews in 1881 (confirmed 24-23) and the nomination of
Lucius Q. C. Lamar in 1888 (confirmed 32-28).
32 The nominations reported unfavorably and then rejected by the Senate involved these nominees: Ebenezer R. Hoar in
1869 (rejected 24-33); William B. Hornblower in 1894 (rejected 24-30); John J. Parker in 1930 (rejected 39-41); and
Robert H. Bork in 1987 (rejected 42-58).
33 The Senate in 1829 postponed taking action on the nomination of John Crittenden after receiving an adverse report
on the nomination from the Judiciary Committee.
34 The most recent occurrence of a nomination being referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee and not reported out of
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nominees were never confirmed to the Court,35 the other three ultimately were, after being
renominated.36
Senate Cloture Votes on Nominations
When a Supreme Court nomination is under Senate consideration, supporters of the nomination When a Supreme Court nomination is under Senate consideration, supporters of the nomination
have available to them, under Senate rules, a procedure for placing a time limit on its further have available to them, under Senate rules, a procedure for placing a time limit on its further
consideration. This procedure is the motion to invoke cloture.consideration. This procedure is the motion to invoke cloture.3739 A cloture motion filed on a A cloture motion filed on a
nomination receives a vote after two days of Senate session. If the Senate agrees to the motion, nomination receives a vote after two days of Senate session. If the Senate agrees to the motion,
further consideration of the further consideration of the Supreme Court nomination is limited to 30 hours.nomination is limited to 30 hours.38
40 Over the last half century, the Senate has required different kinds of majorities to invoke cloture Over the last half century, the Senate has required different kinds of majorities to invoke cloture
on nominations in general, including Supreme Court nominations.on nominations in general, including Supreme Court nominations.3941 Prior to 1975, the majority Prior to 1975, the majority
required was two-thirds of Senators present and voting, a quorum being present.required was two-thirds of Senators present and voting, a quorum being present.4042 Thereafter, Thereafter,
until 2017, ending consideration of Supreme Court nominations required a vote of three-fifths of

committee was in 2016 when President Obama nominated Judge Merrick B. Garland to the vacancy on the Court
created by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. Judge Garland’s nomination was referred to the Judiciary Committee on
March 16, 2016, and remained pending before the committee until it was returned to the President on January 3, 2017.
35 The final outcome for five of these six nominees, however, was determined not by the failure of their nominations to
be reported out of committee, but by action, or lack of action, taken outside the committee—by the Senate, Congress as
a whole, or the President. In 1853, the nomination of William C. Micou was referred to the Judiciary Committee and on
the same day ordered discharged by the Senate, where no action was taken. In 1866, the nomination of Henry Stanbery
was referred to the Judiciary Committee, but shortly afterwards, while the nomination was pending in the Senate, the
Associate Justice position to which Stanbery had been nominated was eliminated by statute. In 1893, the nomination of
William B. Hornblower was referred to the Judiciary Committee, but not reported; later that year, in a new session of
Congress, Hornblower was renominated, reported unfavorably by the Judiciary Committee (in early 1894), and rejected
by the Senate, 24-30. In 1968, the Judiciary Committee declined to report the nomination of Homer Thornberry to
succeed Associate Justice Abe Fortas until the final outcome of the nomination of Fortas to be Chief Justice was
determined. The Thornberry and Fortas nominations were both withdrawn by the President after a motion to close
debate on the Fortas nomination failed to pass in the Senate. (The failure of Fortas’s Chief Justice nomination
eliminated the prospective Associate Justice vacancy that Thornberry had been nominated to fill.) In 2005, the
nomination of Harriet E. Miers was withdrawn by the President before the Judiciary Committee held hearings on the
nomination. By contrast, the failure to be confirmed of a sixth unreported nominee, Merrick B. Garland in 2016, could
be seen as attributable in significant part to the Judiciary Committee not considering or acting on the Garland
nomination.
36 In February 1881, just before the final adjournment of the 46th Congress, the Judiciary Committee voted to postpone
taking action on the Supreme Court nomination of Stanley Matthews; shortly afterwards, however, in a special session
of the 47th Congress, Matthews was renominated, and, although his second nomination was reported unfavorably by the
Judiciary Committee, it was confirmed by the Senate, 24-23. In November 1954, late in the 83rd Congress, the
nomination of John M. Harlan II was referred to the Judiciary Committee, where no action was taken; in 1955, Harlan
was renominated, considered and reported favorably by the Judiciary Committee, and confirmed by the Senate. In
September 2005, before the scheduled start of confirmation hearings, the nomination of John G. Roberts Jr. to be
Associate Justice was withdrawn and, on the same day of the withdrawal, Roberts was renominated for Chief Justice;
the second Roberts nomination was reported favorably by the Judiciary Committee and confirmed by the Senate.
37 See CRS Report RL31980, Senate Consideration of Presidential Nominations: Committee and Floor Procedure, by
Elizabeth Rybicki; also, CRS Report RL30360, Filibusters and Cloture in the Senate, by Valerie Heitshusen and
Richard S. Beth.
38 Ibid.
39 It has only been since 1949, under Senate rules, that cloture could be moved on nominations. Prior to 1949, dating
back to the Senate’s first adoption of a cloture rule in 1917, cloture motions could be filed only on legislative measures.
See CRS Report RL32878, Cloture Attempts on Nominations: Data and Historical Development Through November
20, 2013
, by Richard S. Beth, Elizabeth Rybicki, and Michael Greene.
40 Ibid.
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until 2017, ending consideration of Supreme Court nominations required a vote of three-fifths of Senators duly chosen and sworn (60 Senators unless there was more than one vacancy).Senators duly chosen and sworn (60 Senators unless there was more than one vacancy).4143 The The
cloture threshold for Supreme Court nominations changed again on April 6, 2017, when the cloture threshold for Supreme Court nominations changed again on April 6, 2017, when the
Senate reinterpreted its Rule XXII, to allow a simple majority of Senators voting, a quorum being Senate reinterpreted its Rule XXII, to allow a simple majority of Senators voting, a quorum being
present, to invoke cloture. (The new rule interpretation applied to Court nominations the same present, to invoke cloture. (The new rule interpretation applied to Court nominations the same
majority cloture threshold requirement that the Senate, in a 2013 precedent, had applied to all majority cloture threshold requirement that the Senate, in a 2013 precedent, had applied to all
other nominations.)other nominations.)42
44 As indicated inAs indicated in Table 1, motions to bring debate on Supreme Court nominations to a close have motions to bring debate on Supreme Court nominations to a close have
been made on been made on seveneight occasions: occasions:
The first use occurred in 1968, when Senate supporters of Justice Abe Fortas The first use occurred in 1968, when Senate supporters of Justice Abe Fortas
tried unsuccessfully to end debate on the motion to proceed to his nomination to tried unsuccessfully to end debate on the motion to proceed to his nomination to
be Chief Justice. After the motion was debated at length, the Senate failed to be Chief Justice. After the motion was debated at length, the Senate failed to
invoke cloture by a 45-43 vote,invoke cloture by a 45-43 vote,4345 prompting President Johnson to withdraw the prompting President Johnson to withdraw the
nomination.nomination.44
46 A cloture motion to end debate on a Court nomination occurred again in 1971, A cloture motion to end debate on a Court nomination occurred again in 1971,
when the Senate considered the nomination of Williamwhen the Senate considered the nomination of William H. Rehnquist to be an Rehnquist to be an
Associate Justice. Although the cloture motion failed by a 52-42 vote,Associate Justice. Although the cloture motion failed by a 52-42 vote,45
47 Rehnquist was confirmed later the same day.Rehnquist was confirmed later the same day.46
48 In 1986, a cloture motion was filed on a third Supreme Court nomination, this In 1986, a cloture motion was filed on a third Supreme Court nomination, this
time of sitting Associate Justice Rehnquist to be Chief Justice. Supporters of the time of sitting Associate Justice Rehnquist to be Chief Justice. Supporters of the
nomination mustered more than the three-fifths majority needed to end debate nomination mustered more than the three-fifths majority needed to end debate
(with the Senate voting for cloture 68-31),(with the Senate voting for cloture 68-31),4749 and Justice Rehnquist subsequently and Justice Rehnquist subsequently
was confirmed as Chief Justice.was confirmed as Chief Justice.
A cloture motion was presented to end consideration of a Supreme Court A cloture motion was presented to end consideration of a Supreme Court
nomination a fourth time, during Senate debate on the nomination of Samuel nomination a fourth time, during Senate debate on the nomination of Samuel A.
Alito Jr. in January 2006. The motion was presented on January 26, after two Alito Jr. in January 2006. The motion was presented on January 26, after two
days of Senate floor debate.days of Senate floor debate.4850 On January 30, the Senate voted to invoke cloture On January 30, the Senate voted to invoke cloture
by a 72-25 vote,by a 72-25 vote,4951 and the next day it confirmed the Alito nomination by a vote of and the next day it confirmed the Alito nomination by a vote of
58-42.

41 Ibid.
42 See CRS Report R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court Nominations: In
Brief
, by Valerie Heitshusen. The action was similar to that taken in November 2013, when the Senate had
reinterpreted the cloture rule to allow a simple majority vote to invoke cloture on all nominations except to the
Supreme Court. See CRS Report R43331, Majority Cloture for Nominations: Implications and the “Nuclear”
Proceedings of November 21, 2013
, by Valerie Heitshusen.
43 For the Senate’s debate on the Fortas nomination immediately prior to the vote on the motion to close debate, see
“Supreme Court of the United States,” Congressional Record, vol. 114, October 1, 1968, pp. 28926-28933.
44 The 45 votes in favor of cloture fell far short of the super-majority required—then two-thirds of Senators present and
voting, a quorum being present.
45 For the Senate’s debate on the Rehnquist nomination immediately prior to the vote on the motion to close debate, see
“Cloture Motion,” Congressional Record, vol. 117, December 10, 1971, pp. 46110-46117.
46 The Senate, on December 10, 1971, confirmed the Rehnquist nomination by a vote of 68-26, after voting 22-70 to
reject a motion that a vote on the nomination be deferred until January 18, 1972. Congressional Record, vol. 117,
December 10, 1971, p. 46121 (vote on motion to defer) and p. 46197 (confirmation vote).
47 “Nomination of William H. Rehnquist To Be Chief Justice of the United States,” Congressional Record, vol. 132,
September17, 1986, pp. 23729-23739.
48 “Cloture Motion,” Congressional Record, January 26, 2006, daily edition, vol. 152, p. S197.
49 “Nomination of Samuel A. Alito, Jr., To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States,”
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58-42. In 2017, the Senate voted on a fifth occasion on whether to close debate on a In 2017, the Senate voted on a fifth occasion on whether to close debate on a
Supreme Court nomination, in a series of procedural votes involving the Supreme Court nomination, in a series of procedural votes involving the
Associate Justice nomination of Neil Associate Justice nomination of Neil M. Gorsuch.50Gorsuch.52 On April 6, 2017, a 55-45 On April 6, 2017, a 55-45
vote on a motion to close debate on the nomination fell short of the super-vote on a motion to close debate on the nomination fell short of the super-
majority required under Senate rules—then three-fifths of the Senatemajority required under Senate rules—then three-fifths of the Senate's full s full
membership.membership.5153 Immediately thereafter, however, the Senate voted to reinterpret Immediately thereafter, however, the Senate voted to reinterpret
its cloture rule to allow cloture to be invoked on Supreme Court nominations by a its cloture rule to allow cloture to be invoked on Supreme Court nominations by a
simple majority of Senators voting (a quorum being present).simple majority of Senators voting (a quorum being present).5254 The Senate then, The Senate then,
pursuant to the rule reinterpretation, voted a second time on the motion to close pursuant to the rule reinterpretation, voted a second time on the motion to close
debate on the nomination, again by a 55-45 vote, which this time exceeded the debate on the nomination, again by a 55-45 vote, which this time exceeded the
majority required (now a simple majority).majority required (now a simple majority).5355 The next day, the Senate confirmed The next day, the Senate confirmed
the Gorsuch nomination by a vote of 54-45.the Gorsuch nomination by a vote of 54-45.
After four days of Senate debate, a cloture motion was presented on October 3, After four days of Senate debate, a cloture motion was presented on October 3,
2018, to close debate on the nomination of Brett 2018, to close debate on the nomination of Brett M. Kavanaugh. On October 5, Kavanaugh. On October 5,
the Senate voted to invoke cloture by a 51-49 vote. The Kavanaugh nomination the Senate voted to invoke cloture by a 51-49 vote. The Kavanaugh nomination
was confirmed the next day by a vote of 50-48.was confirmed the next day by a vote of 50-48.
In 2020, the Senate voted on whether to end debate on the Supreme Court In 2020, the Senate voted on whether to end debate on the Supreme Court
nomination of Amy Coney Barrett. The Barrett nomination was the third nomination of Amy Coney Barrett. The Barrett nomination was the third
consecutive nomination to the Court for which a cloture motion was presented to consecutive nomination to the Court for which a cloture motion was presented to
close debate on the nomination. On October 25, after three days of debate, the close debate on the nomination. On October 25, after three days of debate, the
Senate voted to invoke cloture by a 51-48 vote. The Barrett nomination was Senate voted to invoke cloture by a 51-48 vote. The Barrett nomination was
confirmed the following day by a vote of 52-48.confirmed the following day by a vote of 52-48.
Final Action by the Senate or the President
From the first Supreme Court appointments in 1789 to 2020, Presidents have made 164
nominations to the Court. Table 1 shows, in the “Final action by Senate or President” column,
that the Senate confirmed 127 or 77%.54 Of the 37 nominations that were not confirmed, 11 were
rejected by the Senate (all in roll-call votes),55 11 were withdrawn by the President,56 and 15

Congressional Record, January 30, 2006, daily edition, vol. 152, pp. S260-S308.
50 See Congressional Record, April 6, 2017, daily edition, vol. 163, pp. S2388-S2390.
51 Ibid.
52 The Senate established the new precedent, when, by a 48-52 vote, it overturned a ruling of the chair that a 2013
precedent that applied a majority vote cloture threshold to executive branch and lower court nominations did not apply
to Supreme Court nominations. For a brief report explaining the Senate’s April 6, 2017 actions (by which the Senate
effectively extended to Supreme court nominations its November 2013 reinterpretation of Senate Rule XXII), see CRS
Report R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court Nominations: In Brief, by
Valerie Heitshusen.
53 Ibid.
54 The exact confirmation percentage is 77.1%, reached by dividing 125 confirmations by 162 nominations.
55 The earliest Senate rejection of a Supreme Court nomination occurred in 1795, when President George Washington’s
nomination of John Rutledge to be Chief Justice failed on a 10-14 vote. The latest instance was the Senate’s rejection
of Robert H. Bork in 1987, by a 42-58 vote. Between Rutledge and Bork, the following nominations were also rejected:
Alexander Wolcott in 1811, John C. Spencer in 1844, George W. Woodward in 1846, Ebenezer R. Hoar in 1870,
William B. Hornblower in 1894, Wheeler H. Peckham in 1894, John J. Parker in 1930, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. in
1969, and G. Harrold Carswell in 1970.
56 The following Supreme Court nominations were withdrawn, in the years indicated, with the Presidents who withdrew
them shown in parentheses: The first nomination of William Paterson, in 1793 (George Washington); the first
nomination of Reuben H. Walworth, in 1844 (John Tyler); the second nomination of John C. Spencer, in 1844 (John
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  • The nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson became the fourth consecutive nomination to the Court for which a cloture motion was presented to end debate on the nomination. On April 7, 2022, after two days of debate, the Senate voted to invoke cloture by a 53-47 vote. The Jackson nomination was confirmed the same day by a vote of 53-47.
  • Final Action by the Senate or the President From the first Supreme Court appointments in 1789 to the most recent one in 2022, Presidents have made 165 nominations to the Court. Table 1 shows, in the "Final action by Senate or President" column, that the Senate confirmed 128, or 78% of these nominations. Of the 37 nominations that were not confirmed, 11 were rejected by the Senate (all by roll call vote),56 11 were withdrawn by the President,57 and 15
    lapsed at the end of a session of Congress without a Senate vote cast on whether to confirm.lapsed at the end of a session of Congress without a Senate vote cast on whether to confirm.5758 The The
    37 nominations not confirmed by the Senate represented 32 individuals, some of whom were 37 nominations not confirmed by the Senate represented 32 individuals, some of whom were
    nominated more than once. Six individuals whose initial nominations were not confirmed were nominated more than once. Six individuals whose initial nominations were not confirmed were
    later renominated and confirmed for positions on the Court.later renominated and confirmed for positions on the Court.58
    59 While the invariable practice of the Senate in recent decades has been to While the invariable practice of the Senate in recent decades has been to vote on Supreme Court
    nominations by roll callcast roll call votes on Supreme Court nominations, this historically was , this historically was usually not not often the case.the case. For example, Table 2, at the end of this at the end of this
    report, shows that of the report, shows that of the 138 Senate votes on whether to confirm (resulting in 127 confirmations
    and 11 rejections), 65 decisions were reached by roll-call votes, and the other 73 by voice vote or
    unanimous consent.
    128 nominations confirmed by the Senate from 1789 to 2022, 73 (57%) were confirmed by voice vote or unanimous consent, while 55 (43%) were confirmed by roll call vote. Initially, for some 40 years, the Senate rarely used rollInitially, for some 40 years, the Senate rarely used roll- call votes to decide Supreme Court call votes to decide Supreme Court
    nominations. Starting in the 1830s, however, and continuing through the 1880s, the Senate used nominations. Starting in the 1830s, however, and continuing through the 1880s, the Senate used
    roll-roll call votes on Supreme Court nominations somewhat more often than unrecorded votes. The call votes on Supreme Court nominations somewhat more often than unrecorded votes. The
    trend reversed between 1890 and 1965, when fewer than one-third of Senate decisions on trend reversed between 1890 and 1965, when fewer than one-third of Senate decisions on
    confirming Court nominations were by rollconfirming Court nominations were by roll- call vote. Since 1967, though, every Senate vote on call vote. Since 1967, though, every Senate vote on
    whether to confirm a Supreme Court nomination has been by roll callwhether to confirm a Supreme Court nomination has been by roll call. Table 2 shows these trends shows these trends
    within within thethese four historical periods four historical periods just noted, by breaking down the number of , by breaking down the number of Senate decisions on
    confirmation within each period according to whether made bynominations confirmed during each period by either voice vote or unanimous consent voice vote or unanimous consent
    (UC) on the one hand, or by roll(UC) on the one hand, or by roll- call vote, on the other. call vote, on the other. As already mentionedWhile not included in the table, all 11 Senate , all 11 Senate
    rejections of Supreme Court nominations occurred by rollrejections of Supreme Court nominations occurred by roll- call call votes.
    vote. Historically, recorded vote margins on Supreme Court nominations have varied considerably. Historically, recorded vote margins on Supreme Court nominations have varied considerably.
    Some rollSome roll- call votes, either confirming or rejecting a nomination, have been close.60 Many votes, on the other hand, have been overwhelmingly in favor of confirmation.61 More recently, Supreme Court nominations have beencall votes, either confirming or rejecting a nomination, have been close.59 Many votes,

    Tyler); the third nomination of Reuben H. Walworth, in 1845 (John Tyler); the second nomination of Edward King, in
    1845 (John Tyler); George H. Williams and Caleb Cushing, both in 1874 (Ulysses S. Grant); Abe Fortas and Homer
    Thornberry, both in 1968 (Lyndon B. Johnson); John G. Roberts Jr. and Harrier E. Miers, both in 2005 (George W.
    Bush). Less than a week after his first nomination was withdrawn, Paterson was renominated by President Washington
    and confirmed by the Senate on the same day. On the same day that President Bush withdrew the Roberts nomination
    to be Associate Justice, he renominated Roberts to be Chief Justice, and the latter nomination was confirmed.
    57 The 15 nominations that lapsed at the end of a session of Congress, without a Senate confirmation or rejection vote
    or a withdrawal by the President having occurred, can be broken into the following groups according to Senate actions,
    or lack of Senate actions, taken: On three nominations (John Crittenden in 1829, the first nomination of Roger Taney in
    1835, and George E. Badger in 1853), the Senate voted to postpone taking action; the Senate tabled two nominations
    (the first nomination of Edward King in 1844 and Edward A. Bradford in 1852); on one nomination, the Senate
    rejected a motion to proceed (Jeremiah S. Black in 1861, by a 25-26 vote); and on nine nominations, there was no
    record of any vote taken (the second nomination of Reuben H. Walworth in 1844, John M. Read in 1845, William C.
    Micou in 1853, Henry Stanbery in 1866, the first nomination of Stanley Matthews in 1881, the first nomination of
    William B. Hornblower in 1893, the first nomination of Pierce Butler in 1922, the first nomination of John M. Harlan II
    in 1954, and Merrick B. Garland in 2016). However, four of the 15 persons whose nominations lapsed in one session of
    Congress were renominated in the next congressional session and confirmed (Taney in 1835, Matthews in 1881, Butler
    in 1922, and Harlan in 1955).
    58 The six individuals who were not confirmed only to be later renominated and confirmed were, in the following years
    of confirmation shown in parentheses, William Paterson (1793), Roger B. Taney (1836), Stanley Matthews (1881),
    Pierce Butler (1922), John M. Harlan II (1955), and John G. Roberts Jr. (2005).
    59 The closest roll calls ever cast on Supreme Court nominations were the 24-23 vote in 1881 confirming Stanley
    Matthews, the 25-26 vote in 1861 rejecting a motion to proceed to consider the nomination of Jeremiah S. Black, and
    the 26-25 Senate vote in 1853 to postpone consideration of the nomination of George E. Badger. Since the 1960s, the
    closest roll calls on Supreme Court nominations were the 51-49 vote in 2018 confirming Brett Kavanaugh, the 52-48
    vote in 2020 confirming Amy Coney Barrett, the 52-48 vote in 1991 confirming Clarence Thomas, the 45-51 vote in
    1970 rejecting G. Harrold Carswell, the 54-45 vote in 2017 confirming Neil M. Gorsuch, the 45-55 vote in 1969
    rejecting Clement Haynsworth Jr., the 58-42 vote in 2006 confirming Samuel A. Alito Jr., the 42-58 vote in 1987
    rejecting Robert H. Bork, the 63-37 vote in 2010 confirming Elena Kagan, and the 65-33 vote confirming William H.
    Rehnquist to be Chief Justice in 1986. Also noteworthy was the 45-43 vote in 1968 rejecting a motion to close debate
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    on the other hand, have been overwhelmingly in favor of confirmation.60 A recent trend, however,
    has been for Supreme Court nominations to be confirmed by relatively narrower vote margins as confirmed by relatively narrower vote margins as
    a majority of Senators not belonging to the Presidenta majority of Senators not belonging to the President's party have voted against confirmation. s party have voted against confirmation.
    This has been the case with the This has been the case with the sixseven most recent Supreme Court nominations—in 2006 (the Alito most recent Supreme Court nominations—in 2006 (the Alito
    nomination), 2009 (Sotomayor), 2010 (Kagan), 2017 (Gorsuch), 2018 (Kavanaugh), nomination), 2009 (Sotomayor), 2010 (Kagan), 2017 (Gorsuch), 2018 (Kavanaugh), and 2020 2020
    (Barrett)(Barrett), and 2022 (Jackson)..
    Days from Date of Senate Receipt of Nomination to First Hearing
    For Supreme Court nominations, the amount of time elapsing between Senate receipt and start of For Supreme Court nominations, the amount of time elapsing between Senate receipt and start of
    confirmation hearings has varied greatly.confirmation hearings has varied greatly. Table 1 shows that, for all shows that, for all 4849 Court nominations Court nominations
    receiving public confirmation hearings (starting with the Brandeis nomination in 1916), the receiving public confirmation hearings (starting with the Brandeis nomination in 1916), the
    shortest time that elapsed between Senate receipt and start of hearings was four days, for the shortest time that elapsed between Senate receipt and start of hearings was four days, for the
    nominations of both Benjamin nominations of both Benjamin N. Cardozo in 1932 and WilliamCardozo in 1932 and William O. Douglas in 1939; the second Douglas in 1939; the second
    shortest time interval of this sort was five days, for the nominations of both Stanley shortest time interval of this sort was five days, for the nominations of both Stanley F. Reed in Reed in
    1938 and Felix Frankfurter in 1939. The longest time elapsing between Senate receipt and first 1938 and Felix Frankfurter in 1939. The longest time elapsing between Senate receipt and first
    day of confirmation hearings was 82 days, for the nomination of Potter Stewart in 1959; the next-day of confirmation hearings was 82 days, for the nomination of Potter Stewart in 1959; the next-
    longest time interval of this sort was 70 days, for nominee Robert longest time interval of this sort was 70 days, for nominee Robert H. Bork in 1987.Bork in 1987.
    In recent decades, from the late 1960s to the present, the Judiciary Committee has tended to take In recent decades, from the late 1960s to the present, the Judiciary Committee has tended to take
    more time in starting hearings on Supreme Court nominations than it did previously.more time in starting hearings on Supreme Court nominations than it did previously. Table 1
    reveals that prior to 1967, a median of 10 days elapsed between Senate receipt of Supreme Court reveals that prior to 1967, a median of 10 days elapsed between Senate receipt of Supreme Court
    nominations and the first day of confirmation hearings. From the Supreme Court nomination of nominations and the first day of confirmation hearings. From the Supreme Court nomination of
    Thurgood Marshall in 1967 through the nomination of Thurgood Marshall in 1967 through the nomination of Amy Coney BarrettKetanji Brown Jackson to be Associate Justice to be Associate Justice
    in 2020,61in 2022,62 a median of a median of 2726 days elapsed between Senate receipt and first day of confirmation days elapsed between Senate receipt and first day of confirmation
    hearings.hearings.62
    63 Starting in the 1990s, the Judiciary Committee has generally allowed at least four weeks to pass Starting in the 1990s, the Judiciary Committee has generally allowed at least four weeks to pass
    between Senate receipt of Supreme Court nominations and the start of confirmation hearings.
    This block of time is intended to be used by the committee members and staff for thorough study
    and review of background information about nominees and issues relevant to their nominations,
    in preparation for the hearings. In the case of 9 of the 11 most recent Court nominations to receive
    confirmation hearings (starting with the David H. Souter nomination in 1990), the shortest
    elapsed time between Senate receipt and first day of hearings was 28 days.63

    on the nomination of Abe Fortas to be Chief Justice; however, the roll call was not as close as the numbers by
    themselves suggested, since passage of the motion required a two-thirds vote of the Members present and voting.
    60 The most lopsided of these votes were the unanimous roll calls confirming Morrison R. Waite to be Chief Justice in
    1874 (63-0), Harry A. Blackmun in 1970 (94-0), John Paul Stevens in 1975 (98-0), Sandra Day O’Connor in 1981 (99-
    0), Antonin Scalia in 1986 (98-0), and Anthony M. Kennedy in 1988 (97-0); and the near-unanimous votes confirming
    Noah H. Swayne in 1862 (38-1),Warren E. Burger in 1969 to be Chief Justice (74-3), Lewis F. Powell Jr. in 1971 (89-
    1), and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993 (96-3).
    61 In calculating the median elapsed time for the contemporary period, the Marshall nomination in 1967 was selected as
    the starting point for the following reason. The Marshall nomination, it could be argued, marked the start of an era in
    which the confirmation hearings of most, if not all, Supreme Court nominees were highly charged events, covered
    closely by the news media, with nominees interrogated rigorously and extensively (and for more than a day) about their
    judicial philosophy as well as their views on constitutional issues and the proper role of the Supreme Court in the U.S.
    government. For the Marshall nomination, the elapsed time between Senate receipt and start of confirmation hearings
    was 30 days.
    62 See bottom rows of Table 1 for median number of days that elapsed from the date Supreme Court nominations were
    received in the Senate to first hearing dates, for three different time spans.
    63 For the nine nominations, the elapsed time between Senate receipt of nomination and the first day of confirmation
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    The two exceptions to this general timeframe were the nominations of John G. Roberts Jr. in 2005
    (to be Chief Justice) and the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett in 2020.between Senate receipt of Supreme Court nominations and the start of confirmation hearings.64 The three exceptions to this general timeframe were the nominations of John Roberts in 2005 (6 days), Amy Coney Barrett in 2020 (13 days), and Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022 (21 days).65 Although the elapsed Although the elapsed
    time from the date of the Roberts nomination to the date when hearings began was time from the date of the Roberts nomination to the date when hearings began was only six days,
    relatively short (six days), another, longer time interval is more meaningfulanother, longer time interval is more meaningful. Table 1 shows that Robertsshows that Roberts's earlier nomination s earlier nomination
    to be Associate Justice—later withdrawn, in order to be Associate Justice—later withdrawn, in order to havefor Roberts Roberts to be renominated for be renominated for Chief
    Justicethe vacant Chief Justice position—was received by the Senate 45 days prior to the start of hearings on —was received by the Senate 45 days prior to the start of hearings on his Chief Justice
    this latter nomination.nomination.
    The length of time from nomination to the first date of committee hearings for the Barrett The length of time from nomination to the first date of committee hearings for the Barrett
    nomination, 13 days, was the shortest such period for an Associate Justice nomination since 1975 nomination, 13 days, was the shortest such period for an Associate Justice nomination since 1975
    (when committee hearings for John Paul Stevens began 7 days after he was nominated by (when committee hearings for John Paul Stevens began 7 days after he was nominated by
    President Ford).President Ford).
    Days from Senate Receipt to Final Committee Vote
    The time elapsed between Senate receipt of The time elapsed between Senate receipt of a Supreme Court Supreme Court nominations from a President and
    nomination and the final committee final committee votes on the nominationsvote on a nomination has also varied greatly has also varied greatly. Table 1 shows that, for the shows that, for the 113
    114 Court nominations that received final committee votes,Court nominations that received final committee votes,6466 the nomination receiving the most the nomination receiving the most
    prompt committee vote was of Caleb Cushing in 1874, which was reported by the Judiciary prompt committee vote was of Caleb Cushing in 1874, which was reported by the Judiciary
    Committee on the same day that the Senate received it from the President.Committee on the same day that the Senate received it from the President.6567 The committee votes The committee votes
    on 14 other nominations to the court occurred three days or less after the dates of Senate receipt.on 14 other nominations to the court occurred three days or less after the dates of Senate receipt.66
    68 At the other extreme was the 1916 nomination of Louis At the other extreme was the 1916 nomination of Louis D. Brandeis, on which the Judiciary Brandeis, on which the Judiciary
    Committee voted 117 days after Senate receipt and referral to the committee. Five other Committee voted 117 days after Senate receipt and referral to the committee. Five other
    nominations as wellnominations, one in the , one in the 19th19th century and four in the century and four in the 20th20th, received committee votes more , received committee votes more
    than 80 days after Senate receipt from the President.than 80 days after Senate receipt from the President.67
    69 In recent decades, the Judiciary Committee has taken much more time in casting a final vote on In recent decades, the Judiciary Committee has taken much more time in casting a final vote on
    Supreme Court nominations than it did previouslySupreme Court nominations than it did previously. Table 1 shows that prior to 1967, a median of shows that prior to 1967, a median of
    nine days elapsed between Senate receipt of Supreme Court nominations and the committeenine days elapsed between Senate receipt of Supreme Court nominations and the committee’s
    's final vote on reporting them to the full Senate.70 From the Supreme Court nomination of Thurgood Marshall in 1967 through the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022, a median of 51 days elapsed between Senate receipt and final committee vote.71 final vote on reporting them to the full Senate.68 From the Supreme Court nomination of

    hearings was 50 days for David Souter in 1990, 64 days for Clarence Thomas in 1991, 28 days for Ruth Bader
    Ginsburg in 1993, 56 days for Stephen G. Breyer in 1994, 60 days for Samuel A. Alito Jr. in 2005-2006, 42 days for
    Sonia Sotomayor in 2009, 49 days for Elena Kagan in 2010, 47 days for Neil M. Gorsuch in 2017, and 56 days for
    Brett M. Kavanaugh in 2018.
    64 As already mentioned, the first such nomination, of Alexander Wolcott in 1811, was reported by a select committee;
    all subsequently reported nominations were reported by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
    65 Ironically, five days after the committee’s favorable, and extremely prompt, recommendation of Cushing, President
    Ulysses S. Grant withdrew the nomination.
    66 Five nominations were voted on by the Judiciary Committee one day after their receipt by the Senate: Robert C.
    Grier in 1846; John A. Campbell in 1853; Morrison R. Waite, to be Chief Justice, in 1874; Horace Gray in 1881; and
    Harold H. Burton in 1945. Six nominations were voted on by the committee two days after Senate receipt: James M.
    Wayne in 1835; Samuel Nelson in 1845; Noah H. Swayne in 1862; David Davis in 1862; Stephen J. Field in 1963; and
    Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1902. Three nominations were voted on by the committee three days after Senate receipt:
    Horace H. Lurton in 1909; Willis Van Devanter in 1910; and Joseph R. Lamar in 1910.
    67 The first of Reuben H. Walworth’s three nominations to the Court in 1844 was voted on by the Judiciary Committee
    93 days after Senate receipt and committee referral. During the 20th century, the Judiciary Committee, in addition to its
    1916 vote on the Brandeis nomination, voted on the following nominations more than 80 days after Senate receipt:
    Potter Stewart in 1959 (93 days); Robert H. Bork in 1987 (91 days), Abe Fortas, to be Chief Justice, in 1968 (83 days);
    and Clarence Thomas in 1991 (81 days).
    68 All of the 15 aforementioned nominations on which the Judiciary Committee voted three days or less after Senate
    receipt were made prior to 1946, and 14 of the 15 were made prior to 1911.
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    Thurgood Marshall in 1967 through the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett in 2020, a median of
    51 days elapsed between Senate receipt and final committee vote.69
    Somewhat earlier, during the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953 to 1961), two of five Somewhat earlier, during the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower (1953 to 1961), two of five
    Supreme Court nominations Supreme Court nominations werehad been pending, prior to Judiciary Committee vote, in excess of the pending, prior to Judiciary Committee vote, in excess of the
    1967-1967-to-20202022 median of 51 days median of 51 days for that time interval (while two other nominations (while two other nominations werehad been pending pending
    44 and 49 days44 and 49 days, respectively respectively, before receiving committee action) before receiving committee action);70 however, the.72 The corresponding corresponding
    time intervals for the next three Court nominations (two by President John F. Kennedy and one by time intervals for the next three Court nominations (two by President John F. Kennedy and one by
    President Lyndon B. Johnson) were all well below the 51-day median.President Lyndon B. Johnson) were all well below the 51-day median.71
    73 Days from Senate Receipt to Final Senate or Presidential Action
    The Supreme Court confirmation process now typically extends over a much longer period of The Supreme Court confirmation process now typically extends over a much longer period of
    time than it once did.time than it once did. Table 1 shows that from the appointment of the first Justices in 1789, shows that from the appointment of the first Justices in 1789,
    continuing into the early continuing into the early 20th20th century, most Senate confirmations of Supreme Court nominees century, most Senate confirmations of Supreme Court nominees
    occurred within a week of the nominations being made by the President. In recent decades, by occurred within a week of the nominations being made by the President. In recent decades, by
    contrast, it has become the norm for the Court appointment process—from Senate receipt of contrast, it has become the norm for the Court appointment process—from Senate receipt of
    nominations from the President to Senate confirmation or other final action (such as Senate nominations from the President to Senate confirmation or other final action (such as Senate
    rejection, or withdrawal by the President)—to take more than two months.rejection, or withdrawal by the President)—to take more than two months.
    The last column ofThe last column of Table 1 shows the number of days that elapsed from the dates Supreme Court shows the number of days that elapsed from the dates Supreme Court
    nominations were received in the Senate until the dates of final nominations were received in the Senate until the dates of final action by the Senate or PresidentSenate or presidential action. The . The
    number of elapsed days is shown for number of elapsed days is shown for 155156 of the of the 164165 nominations listed in the table, with no nominations listed in the table, with no
    elapsed time shown for nine nominations on which there was no record of any kind of official or elapsed time shown for nine nominations on which there was no record of any kind of official or
    effective final action by the Senate or by the President.effective final action by the Senate or by the President.7274 At the bottom of the table, the median At the bottom of the table, the median
    number of elapsed days from initial Senate receipt until final action by the Senate or the President number of elapsed days from initial Senate receipt until final action by the Senate or the President
    is shown for three historical time spans—1789-is shown for three historical time spans—1789-20202022, 1789-1966, and 1967-2022. In recent decades, the median elapsed time for Supreme Court nominations to receive final action has increased dramatically, greatly surpassing the median time taken on earlier nominations. Table 1 shows that from 1967 (starting with the nomination of Thurgood Marshall) through 2022 (with the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson), a median of 66 days elapsed from when a Supreme Court nomination was received in the Senate until the date it received final action, compared with a median of 7 days for the same interval for the prior years of 1789 to 1966.

    Most recently, the overall length of time from nomination to confirmation for Ketanji Brown Jackson was 38 days (apart from the Barrett nomination in 2020, this was the shortest length of time from nomination to confirmation for a nominee to the Court since 1981, when Sandra Day O'Connor was confirmed 33 days after being nominated).75

    The number of days that elapsed from nomination to final action for the second-
    , 1789-1966, and 1967-2020.

    69 See bottom rows of Table 1 for median number of days that elapsed from the date Supreme Court nominations were
    received in the Senate to final Senate vote dates, for three different time spans.
    70 The four Eisenhower nominations for which 44 or more days elapsed from the date received in the Senate to the date
    voted on by the Senate Judiciary Committee were those of: Earl Warren to be Chief Justice in 1954, 44 days; John M.
    Harlan II in 1955, 59 days; William J. Brennan Jr. in 1957, 49 days; and Potter Stewart in 1959, 93 days. Three of the
    nominees—Warren, Brennan, and Stewart—were already on the Court as recess appointees, a circumstance that served
    perhaps to make action on their nominations seem less urgent to the committee than if their seats on the Court had been
    vacant. Harlan, however, was not a recess appointee at the time of his nomination. See “The Harlan Nomination,” New
    York Times
    , February 25, 1955, p. 20, discussing, according to the editorial, the “inexcusable delay” on the part of the
    committee in acting on the nomination and the objections to the nomination voiced by a few of the committee’s
    members. (Ultimately, the committee voted 10-4 to report the nomination favorably.) Receiving much more
    expeditious committee action was President Eisenhower’s fifth Supreme Court nomination, of Charles E. Whittaker in
    1957, which was approved by the Judiciary Committee 16 days after Senate receipt.
    71 The days that elapsed from the date received in the Senate to the date voted on by the Senate Judiciary Committee
    were eight days and 25 days for the 1962 nominations of Byron R. White and Arthur J. Goldberg and 13 days for the
    1965 nomination of Abe Fortas to be Associate Justice.
    72 Besides nominations that received official final Senate action in the form of confirmation or rejection (127 and 11,
    respectively), or that were withdrawn by the President (11), six others are treated in the table as also receiving final
    action, albeit not of a definitive official sort—with three having been postponed by the Senate, two tabled, and one (the
    nomination of Jeremiah S. Black in 1861) not considered after a motion to proceed was defeated by a 25-26 vote.
    While the six nominations remained pending in the Senate after the noted actions, the effect of the actions, it can be
    argued, was decisive in eliminating any prospect of confirmation, and thus constituted a final Senate action for time
    measurement purposes. Accordingly, for these six nominations, the number of days elapsed is measured from date of
    Senate receipt to the dates of effective final action just noted.
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    In recent decades, the median elapsed time for Supreme Court nominations to receive final action
    has increased dramatically, dwarfing the median time taken on earlier nominations. Table 1
    shows that from 1967 (starting with the nomination of Thurgood Marshall) through 2020 (the
    year during which the Senate confirmed the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett) a median of 68
    days elapsed from when a Supreme Court nomination was received in the Senate until the date it
    received final action, compared with a median of 7 days for the same interval for the prior years
    of 1789 to 1966.73 The number of days that elapsed from nomination to final action (27 days) for
    the most recent nomination to the Court, that of Amy Coney Barrett, was closer to the median for most recent nomination to the Court, that of Amy Coney Barrett, was closer to the median for
    nominations during the 1789 to 1966 period than to the median for nominations since 1967 (i.e., a nominations during the 1789 to 1966 period than to the median for nominations since 1967 (i.e., a
    20-day difference compared to a 41-day difference). Additionally, the length of time from 20-day difference compared to a 41-day difference). Additionally, the length of time from
    nomination to Senate confirmation nomination to Senate confirmation of an Associate Justice nomination to the Court was, for the for the
    Barrett nominationBarrett nomination, was the shortest since the confirmation of John Paul Stevens in 1975. the shortest since the confirmation of John Paul Stevens in 1975.
    Most of the Supreme Court nominations receiving final action within a relatively brief period of Most of the Supreme Court nominations receiving final action within a relatively brief period of
    time—for example, within three days of initial receipt in the Senate—occurred before the time—for example, within three days of initial receipt in the Senate—occurred before the 20th
    century,7420th century,76 while most of the nominations receiving final action after a relatively long period of while most of the nominations receiving final action after a relatively long period of
    time—for example, 75 days or more after receipt in the Senate—occurred in the time—for example, 75 days or more after receipt in the Senate—occurred in the 20th20th century (and century (and
    nearly all of these since 1967).nearly all of these since 1967).75
    77 The presence of Senate committee involvement has clearly tended to increase the overall length The presence of Senate committee involvement has clearly tended to increase the overall length
    of the Supreme Court confirmation process. Of the 26 Court nominations made prior to the of the Supreme Court confirmation process. Of the 26 Court nominations made prior to the
    establishment of the Judiciary Committee in 1816, only one, of Alexander Wolcott in 1811, establishment of the Judiciary Committee in 1816, only one, of Alexander Wolcott in 1811,
    received final action more than seven days after initial Senate receipt (being rejected by the received final action more than seven days after initial Senate receipt (being rejected by the
    Senate nine days after receipt). It also was the only Court nomination prior to 1816 which was Senate nine days after receipt). It also was the only Court nomination prior to 1816 which was
    referred to, and considered by, a select committee. Subsequently, until the Civil War, six referred to, and considered by, a select committee. Subsequently, until the Civil War, six
    nominations received final action more than 50 days after initial Senate receipt. All six were first nominations received final action more than 50 days after initial Senate receipt. All six were first
    considered and reported by the Judiciary Committee. During the same period, other Court considered and reported by the Judiciary Committee. During the same period, other Court
    nominations were considered and acted on by the Senate more quickly—some with, and some nominations were considered and acted on by the Senate more quickly—some with, and some
    without, first being referred to committee.without, first being referred to committee.
    Subsequent historical developments involving the Senate Judiciary Committee further served to Subsequent historical developments involving the Senate Judiciary Committee further served to
    increase the median length of the Supreme Court confirmation process. One such development increase the median length of the Supreme Court confirmation process. One such development
    was the Senatewas the Senate's adoption of a rule in 1868 that nominations be referred to appropriate standing s adoption of a rule in 1868 that nominations be referred to appropriate standing
    committees, resulting in the referral of nearly all Supreme Court nominations thereafter to the committees, resulting in the referral of nearly all Supreme Court nominations thereafter to the
    Judiciary Committee. Another was the increasing practice of the Judiciary Committee in the Judiciary Committee. Another was the increasing practice of the Judiciary Committee in the 20th
    20th century of holding public confirmation hearings on Supreme Court nominations (ultimately to century of holding public confirmation hearings on Supreme Court nominations (ultimately to
    become standard practice). A third, more recent, historical trend has involved the pace and

    73 At first glance, the nomination of John G. Roberts Jr. for Chief Justice in 2005 appears to be a deviation from the
    1967 to 2009 median interval from date received to final action of 68 days, as the nomination was confirmed only 23
    days after its initial receipt in the Senate. However, it can be argued that a more meaningful context is to see the
    Roberts Chief Justice nomination (received in the Senate on September 6, 2005) in relation to the earlier July 29, 2005,
    nomination of Judge Roberts to be Associate Justice. After the death of Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist on
    September 3, 2005, the Roberts Associate Justice nomination was withdrawn, and he was renominated to be Chief
    Justice. Hearings on the Roberts Associate Justice nomination, set to begin on September 6, were cancelled, and
    rescheduled hearings, on the Chief Justice nomination, began on September 12. The overall time that elapsed from the
    Associate Justice nomination of Judge Roberts on July 29 until Senate confirmation of his Chief Justice nomination on
    September 29 was 62 days.
    74 Table 1 shows that 43 nominations received final Senate or presidential action three days or less after date of receipt
    in the Senate. Thirty-six of the 43 were pre-20th century nominations.
    75 Table 1 shows that 18 nominations received final Senate or presidential action more than 75 days after date of
    receipt in the Senate. Fourteen of the 18 were 20th or 21st century nominations, with 12 made since 1967.
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    become standard practice). A third, more recent, historical trend has involved the pace and thoroughness of the Judiciary Committee in preparing for and conducting confirmation hearings. thoroughness of the Judiciary Committee in preparing for and conducting confirmation hearings.
    Since the late 1960s, close and thorough examination of the background, qualifications, and Since the late 1960s, close and thorough examination of the background, qualifications, and
    views of Supreme Court nominees has become the norm for the Judiciary Committee, an views of Supreme Court nominees has become the norm for the Judiciary Committee, an
    approach that typically extends the confirmation process by at least several weeks, as a result of approach that typically extends the confirmation process by at least several weeks, as a result of
    preparation for and holding of confirmation hearings.preparation for and holding of confirmation hearings.
    Recess Appointments to the Supreme Court
    On 12 occasions in the nationOn 12 occasions in the nation's history, Presidents have made temporary recess appointments to s history, Presidents have made temporary recess appointments to
    the Supreme Court without first submitting nominations to the the Supreme Court without first submitting nominations to the SenateSenate. Table 1 identifies all of identifies all of
    these 12 appointments, showing how each was related to a later nomination of the appointee for these 12 appointments, showing how each was related to a later nomination of the appointee for
    the same position. The table shows that nine of the 12 recess appointments were made before the the same position. The table shows that nine of the 12 recess appointments were made before the
    end of the Civil War,end of the Civil War,7678 with the last three made almost a century later, in the 1950s, during the with the last three made almost a century later, in the 1950s, during the
    presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower.presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower.77
    79 Each of the 12 recess appointments occurred when a President exercised his power under the Each of the 12 recess appointments occurred when a President exercised his power under the
    Constitution to make recess appointments when the Senate was not in session.Constitution to make recess appointments when the Senate was not in session.7880 Historically, Historically,
    when recesses between sessions of the Senate were much longer than they are today, recess when recesses between sessions of the Senate were much longer than they are today, recess
    appointments served the purpose of averting long vacancies on the Court when the Senate was appointments served the purpose of averting long vacancies on the Court when the Senate was
    unavailable to confirm a Presidentunavailable to confirm a President's appointees. The terms of these recess appointments, s appointees. The terms of these recess appointments,
    however, were limited by the constitutional requirement that they expire at the end of the next however, were limited by the constitutional requirement that they expire at the end of the next
    session of Congress (unlike the lifetime appointments Court appointees receive when nominated session of Congress (unlike the lifetime appointments Court appointees receive when nominated
    and then confirmed by the Senate).and then confirmed by the Senate).79
    81 Despite the temporary nature of these appointments, every person appointed during a recess of Despite the temporary nature of these appointments, every person appointed during a recess of
    the Senate except for one—John Rutledge, to be Chief Justice, in 1795—ultimately received a the Senate except for one—John Rutledge, to be Chief Justice, in 1795—ultimately received a
    lifetime appointment to the Court after being nominated by the President and confirmed by the lifetime appointment to the Court after being nominated by the President and confirmed by the
    Senate. Senate. AsAs Table 1 shows, all 12 of the recess appointees were subsequently nominated to the shows, all 12 of the recess appointees were subsequently nominated to the
    same position, and 11 (all except for Rutledge) were confirmed.same position, and 11 (all except for Rutledge) were confirmed.
    President EisenhowerPresident Eisenhower's three recess appointments in the 1950s generated controversy. Concerns s three recess appointments in the 1950s generated controversy. Concerns
    were expressed, among other things, over potential difficulties placed on Senators on the were expressed, among other things, over potential difficulties placed on Senators on the
    Judiciary Committee interrogating a nominee who already was sitting on the Court, and over the Judiciary Committee interrogating a nominee who already was sitting on the Court, and over the
    possibility of the judgments of a recess-appointed Justice being shaped by concerns with his possibility of the judgments of a recess-appointed Justice being shaped by concerns with his
    eventual confirmation process.eventual confirmation process.8082 The possibility of further recess appointments prompted the The possibility of further recess appointments prompted the
    Senate in 1960, voting closely along party lines, to pass a resolution expressing opposition to

    76 See in Table 1 the recess appointments of Thomas Johnson in 1791, John Rutledge (to be Chief Justice) in 1795,
    Bushrod Washington in 1798, H. Brockholst Livingston in 1806, Smith Thompson in 1823, John McKinley in 1837,
    Levi Woodbury in 1845, Benjamin R. Curtis in 1851, and David Davis in 1862.
    77 See in Table 1 the recess appointments of Earl Warren (to be Chief Justice) in 1953, William J. Brennan Jr. in 1956,
    and Potter Stewart in 1958.
    78 Specifically, Article II, Section 2, clause 3 of the U.S. Constitution empowers the President “to fill up all Vacancies
    that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next
    Session.”
    79 For background on the history of recess appointments to the Supreme Court, and the policy and constitutional issues
    associated with those appointments, see CRS Report RL31112, Recess Appointments of Federal Judges, by Louis
    Fisher (out of print, available to congressional clients from author upon request); and Henry B. Hogue, “The Law:
    Recess Appointments to Article III Courts,” Political Science Quarterly, vol. 34, September 2004, p. 656.
    80 See U.S. Congress. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Expressing the Sense of the Senate That Recess
    Appointments to the Supreme Court of the United States Should Not Be Made Except Under Unusual Circumstances
    ,
    report to accompany S.Res. 334, 86th Cong., 2nd sess., August 22, 1960, S.Rept. 1893 (Washington: GPO, 1960).
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    Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2020

    Senate in 1960, voting closely along party lines, to pass a resolution expressing opposition to Supreme Court recess appointments in the future.Supreme Court recess appointments in the future.8183 More recently, the two Houses of Congress More recently, the two Houses of Congress
    have, on a regular basis from the have, on a regular basis from the 110th110th Congress (2007-2008) onward, kept their recesses Congress (2007-2008) onward, kept their recesses
    relatively short, effectively preventing Presidents from making any recess appointments relatively short, effectively preventing Presidents from making any recess appointments
    (including to the Supreme Court) during those periods.(including to the Supreme Court) during those periods.82
    84 Concluding Observations
    The preceding discussion suggests that Senate treatment of Supreme Court nominations has gone The preceding discussion suggests that Senate treatment of Supreme Court nominations has gone
    through various phases during the more than 200 years of through various phases during the more than 200 years of appointments to the Courtthe Republic. Initially, such . Initially, such
    nominations were handled without Senate committee involvement. Later, from 1816 to 1868, nominations were handled without Senate committee involvement. Later, from 1816 to 1868,
    most nominations to the Supreme Court were referred to the Judiciary Committee, but only by most nominations to the Supreme Court were referred to the Judiciary Committee, but only by
    motion. Since 1868, as the result of a change in its rules, the Senate has referred nearly all Court motion. Since 1868, as the result of a change in its rules, the Senate has referred nearly all Court
    nominations to the Judiciary Committee. During the rest of the nominations to the Judiciary Committee. During the rest of the 19th19th century and early century and early 20th20th century, century,
    the committee considered nominations without public hearings. Subsequently, public hearings the committee considered nominations without public hearings. Subsequently, public hearings
    gradually became the more common, if not invariable, committee practice, although many of the gradually became the more common, if not invariable, committee practice, although many of the
    earlier hearings were perfunctory and heldearlier hearings were perfunctory and held simply to accommodate a small number of witnesses to accommodate a small number of witnesses
    wishing to testify against the nominees. Gradually, however, in the latter half of the wishing to testify against the nominees. Gradually, however, in the latter half of the 20th20th century, century,
    public hearings on Supreme Court nominations lasting four or more days—with nominees public hearings on Supreme Court nominations lasting four or more days—with nominees being present present
    part of the time to answer extensive questioning from committee members—would become the part of the time to answer extensive questioning from committee members—would become the
    usual practice. This usual practice. This would remaincontinues to be the Judiciary Committee the Judiciary Committee's practice in considering Supreme s practice in considering Supreme
    Court nominations Court nominations in the 21stduring the 21st century. century.
    Also, the overall length of time taken by the Supreme Court confirmation process has, in general, Also, the overall length of time taken by the Supreme Court confirmation process has, in general,
    increased significantly over the course of more than 200 years. From the appointment of the first increased significantly over the course of more than 200 years. From the appointment of the first
    Justices in 1789, continuing well into the Justices in 1789, continuing well into the 20th20th century, most Supreme Court nominations received century, most Supreme Court nominations received
    final action (usually, but not always, in the form of Senate confirmation) within a week of being final action (usually, but not always, in the form of Senate confirmation) within a week of being
    submitted by the President to the Senate. In recent decades, by contrast, it has become the norm submitted by the President to the Senate. In recent decades, by contrast, it has become the norm
    for the confirmation process to take from two to three months.for the confirmation process to take from two to three months.
    Historically Additionally, recorded vote margins on Supreme Court nominations have varied considerably. , recorded vote margins on Supreme Court nominations have varied considerably.
    Some rollSome roll- call votes, either confirming or rejecting a nomination, have been close, while many call votes, either confirming or rejecting a nomination, have been close, while many
    other votes have been overwhelmingly in favor of confirmation. A trend in recent decades, other votes have been overwhelmingly in favor of confirmation. A trend in recent decades,
    however, has been for Supreme Court nominations however, has been for Supreme Court nominations which receivereceiving a Senate vote to be confirmed a Senate vote to be confirmed
    by narrower vote marginsby narrower vote margins—with. For example, as previously discussed, the , as previously discussed, the sixseven most recently confirmed most recently confirmed
    nominations nominations receivingto the Court received nay votes from a majority of Senators not belonging to the President nay votes from a majority of Senators not belonging to the President’s
    's party. party.

    81 Adopted by the Senate on August 29, 1960, by a 48-37 vote, S.Res. 334 expressed the sense of the Senate that recess
    appointments to the Supreme Court “should not be made, except, under unusual circumstances and for the purpose of
    preventing or ending a demonstrable breakdown in the administration of the Court’s business.” “Opposition to Recess
    Appointments to the Supreme Court,” debate in Senate on S.Res. 334, Congressional Record, vol. 106 (August 29,
    1960), pp. 18130-18145.
    82 “From the 110th Congress onward,” a CRS report has noted, “it has become common for the Senate and House to use
    certain scheduling practices as a means of precluding the President from making recess appointments. The practices do
    this by preventing the occurrence of a Senate recess of sufficient length for the President to be able to use his recess
    appointment authority. As previous discussed ..., in a June 26, 2014 opinion [ Nat’l Labor Relations Bd. v. Noel
    Canning, 134 S. Ct. 2550 (2014)], the U.S. Supreme Court held that the President’s recess appointment power may be
    used essentially only during a recess of 10 days or longer.” CRS Report RS21308, Recess Appointments: Frequently
    Asked Questions
    , by Henry B. Hogue.
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    Other trends and historical phases may be discerned fromOther trends and historical phases may be discerned from Table 1 andand Table 2. StillStill other trends other trends,
    of course, may be revealed by future nominations that Presidents make and by the actions taken may be revealed by future nominations that Presidents make and by the actions taken
    on them by the Senate and its Judiciary Committee.by the Senate and its Judiciary Committee.

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    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Table 1. Nominations to the Supreme Court of the United States, 1789-2020
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    2022 Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by

    Final action by Senate or President

    Days from date received in Senate to:

    Nominee

    President

    Date received in Senatea Public hearing date(s)
    received in

    hearing
    Final vote
    dateb Final
    vote

    Date

    Final actionc

    First public hearing date

    Committee final vote date

    Final action by Senate or President

    John Jay of New York (Chief Justice, hereinafter C. J.)

    Washington

    09/24/1789

    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.

    09/26/1789

    Confirmed

    2

    John Rutledge of South Carolina

    Washington

    09/24/1789

    09/26/1789

    Confirmed

    2

    William Cushing of Mass.

    Washington

    09/24/1789

    09/26/1789

    Confirmed

    2

    Robert Harrison of Maryland

    Washington

    09/24/1789

    09/26/1789

    Confirmed (Nominee declined)

    2

    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    John Jay of
    Washington
    09/24/1789
    09/26/1789 Confirmed


    2
    New York
    (Chief Justice,
    hereinafter
    C. J.)
    John Rutledge Washington
    09/24/1789
    09/26/1789 Confirmed


    2
    of South
    Carolina
    Wil iam
    Washington
    09/24/1789
    09/26/1789 Confirmed


    2
    Cushing of
    Mass.
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee
    in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.
    Robert
    Washington
    09/24/1789
    09/26/1789 Confirmed


    2
    Harrison of
    (Nominee
    Maryland
    declined)
    James Wilson
    Washington
    09/24/1789
    09/26/1789 Confirmed


    2
    of Pennsylvania
    John Blair Jr. of Washington
    09/24/1789
    09/26/1789 Confirmed


    2
    Virginia
    James Iredell of Washington
    02/09/1790
    02/10/1790 Confirmed


    1
    North Carolina
    (Nom. Date
    02/08/1790)
    Thomas
    Washington
    Recess Appointment, 08/05/1791
    Johnson of
    Maryland
    11/01/1791
    11/07/1791 Confirmed


    6
    James Wilson of Pennsylvania

    Washington

    09/24/1789

    09/26/1789

    Confirmed

    2

    John Blair Jr. of Virginia

    Washington

    09/24/1789

    09/26/1789

    Confirmed

    2

    James Iredell of North Carolina

    Washington

    02/09/1790

    (Nom. Date 02/08/1790)

    02/10/1790

    Confirmed

    1

    Thomas Johnson of Maryland

    Washington

    Recess Appointment, 08/05/1791

    11/01/1791

    (Nom. Date 10/31/1791)

    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee
    (Nom. Date in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.
    10/31/1791)
    CRS-21

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Wil iam
    Washington
    02/27/1793
    02/28/1793 Withdrawn


    1

    11/07/1791

    Confirmed

    6

    William Paterson of New Jersey

    Washington

    02/27/1793

    02/28/1793

    Withdrawn

    1

    William
    Paterson of Paterson of
    New Jersey
    Wil iam
    Washington
    03/04/1793
    03/04/1793 Confirmed


    0
    Paterson of
    New Jersey
    John Rutledge Washington
    New Jersey

    Washington

    03/04/1793

    03/04/1793

    Confirmed

    0

    John Rutledge of South Carolina (C. J.)

    Washington

    Recess Appointment, 07/01/1795
    of South
    Carolina

    12/10/1795

    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.

    12/15/1795

    Rejected (10-14)

    5

    William Cushing of Mass. (C. J.)

    Washington

    01/26/1796

    01/27/1796

    Confirmed (Nominee declined)

    1

    Samuel Chase of Maryland

    Washington

    01/26/1796

    01/27/1796

    Confirmed

    1

    Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut (C. J.)

    Washington

    03/03/1796

    03/04/1796

    Confirmed (21-1)

    1

    Bushrod Washington of Virginia

    J. Adams

    Recess Appointment, 09/29/1798

    12/19/1798

    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.

    12/20/1798

    Confirmed

    1

    Alfred Moore of North Carolina

    J. Adams

    12/04/1799

    12/10/1799

    Confirmed

    6

    John Jay of New York (C. J.)

    J. Adams

    12/18/1800

    12/19/1800

    Confirmed (Nominee declined)

    1

    John Marshall of Virginia (C. J.)

    J. Adams

    01/20/1801

    01/27/1801

    Confirmed

    7

    William Johnson of South Carolina

    Jefferson

    03/22/1804

    03/24/1804

    Confirmed

    2

    H. Brockholst Livingston of New York

    Jefferson

    Recess Appointment, 11/10/1806

    12/15/1806

    (Nom. date 12/13/1806)

    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.

    12/17/1806

    Confirmed

    2

    Thomas Todd of Kentucky

    Jefferson

    02/28/1807

    03/02/1807

    Confirmed

    2

    Levi Lincoln of Mass.

    Madison

    01/02/1811

    01/03/1811

    Confirmed (Nominee declined)

    1

    Alexander Wolcott of Connecticut

    Madison

    02/04/1811

    No record of hearing

    Select Committee, 02/13/1811

    Reported

    02/13/1811

    Rejected (9-24)

    9

    9

    John Quincy Adams of Mass.

    Madison

    02/21/1811

    12/10/1795
    12/15/1795
    Rejected


    5
    (C. J.)
    (10-14)
    Wil iam
    Washington
    01/26/1796
    01/27/1796 Confirmed


    1
    Cushing of
    (Nominee
    Mass. (C. J.)
    declined)
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee
    Samuel Chase Washington
    01/26/1796
    in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral. 01/27/1796 Confirmed


    1
    of Maryland
    Oliver
    Washington
    03/03/1796
    03/04/1796 Confirmed


    1
    El sworth of
    (21-1)
    Connecticut
    (C. J.)
    Bushrod
    J. Adams
    Recess Appointment, 09/29/1798
    Washington of
    Virginia
    12/19/1798
    12/20/1798 Confirmed


    1
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee
    Alfred Moore J. Adams
    12/04/1799
    in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral. 12/10/1799 Confirmed


    6
    of North
    Carolina
    CRS-22

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    John Jay of
    J. Adams
    12/18/1800
    12/19/1800 Confirmed


    1
    New York
    (Nominee
    (C. J.)
    declined)
    John Marshall
    J. Adams
    01/20/1801
    01/27/1801 Confirmed


    7
    of Virginia
    (C. J.)
    Wil iam
    Jefferson
    03/22/1804
    03/24/1804 Confirmed


    2
    Johnson of
    South Carolina
    H. Brockholst Jefferson
    Recess Appointment, 11/10/1806
    Livingston of
    New York
    12/15/1806
    12/17/1806 Confirmed


    2
    (Nom. date
    12/13/1806)
    Thomas Todd Jefferson
    02/28/1807
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee 03/02/1807 Confirmed


    2
    of Kentucky
    in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.
    Levi Lincoln of Madison
    01/02/1811
    01/03/1811 Confirmed


    1
    Mass.
    (Nominee
    declined)
    Alexander
    Madison
    02/04/1811
    No record
    Select
    Reported
    02/13/1811
    Rejected

    9
    9
    Wolcott of
    of hearing
    Committee,
    (9-24)
    Connecticut
    02/13/1811
    John Quincy
    Madison
    02/21/1811
    02/22/1811 Confirmed


    1
    Adams of Mass.
    (Nominee
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee
    declined)
    Nomination predated creation of Judiciary Committee in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.in 12/10/1816. No record of other committee referral.
    Joseph Story of Madison
    11/15/1811
    11/18/1811 Confirmed


    3
    Mass.
    CRS-23

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Gabriel Duvall Madison
    11/15/1811
    11/18/1811 Confirmed


    3
    of Maryland
    Smith
    Monroe
    Recess Appointment, 09/01/1823
    Thompson of
    New York
    12/08/1823
    12/09/1823 Confirmed


    1
    (Nom. date
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    12/5/1823)
    Robert Trimble J. Q. Adams
    04/12/1826

    02/22/1811

    Confirmed (Nominee declined)

    1

    Joseph Story of Mass.

    Madison

    11/15/1811

    11/18/1811

    Confirmed

    3

    Gabriel Duvall of Maryland

    Madison

    11/15/1811

    11/18/1811

    Confirmed

    3

    Smith Thompson of New York

    Monroe

    Recess Appointment, 09/01/1823

    12/08/1823

    (Nom. date 12/5/1823)

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    12/09/1823

    Confirmed

    1

    Robert Trimble of Kentucky

    J. Q. Adams

    04/12/1826

    (Nom. date 04/11/1826)

    Motion to refer to Judiciary Committee rejected by Senate, 05/09/1826 (7-25)

    05/09/1826

    Confirmed (27-5)

    27

    John Crittenden of Kentucky

    J. Q. Adams

    12/18/1828

    (Nom. date 12/17/1828)

    No record of hearing

    01/26/1829

    Reported with recommen-dation not to act

    02/12/1829

    Postponed (23-17)

    39

    56

    John McLean of Ohio

    Jackson

    03/06/1829

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    03/07/1829

    Confirmed

    1

    Henry Baldwin of Pennsylvania

    Jackson

    01/05/1830

    (Nom. date 01/04/1830)

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    01/06/1830

    Confirmed (41-2)

    1

    James Wayne of Georgia

    Jackson

    01/07/1835

    (Nom. date 01/06/1835)

    No record of hearing

    01/09/1835

    Reported

    01/09/1835

    Confirmed

    2

    2

    Roger Taney of Maryland

    Jackson

    01/15/1835

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    03/03/1835

    Postponed (24-21)

    47

    Roger Taney of Maryland (C. J.)

    Jackson

    12/28/1835

    No record of hearing

    01/05/1836

    Reported

    Motion to proceed, 03/14/1836 (25-19)

    8

    78

    03/15/1836

    Confirmed (29-15)

    Philip Barbour of Virginia

    Jackson

    12/28/1835

    No record of hearing

    01/05/1836

    Reported

    Motion to proceed, 03/15/1836 (25-20)

    8

    78

    03/15/1836

    Confirmed (30-11)

    William Smith of Alabama

    Jackson

    03/03/1837

    No record of hearing

    03/08/1837

    Reported

    03/08/1837

    Confirmed (23-18) (Nominee declined)

    5

    5

    John Catron of Tennessee

    Jackson

    03/03/1837

    No record of hearing

    03/08/1837

    Reported

    03/08/1837

    Confirmed (28-15)

    5

    5

    John McKinley of Alabama

    Van Buren

    Recess Appointment, 04/22/1837

    09/19/1837

    (Nom. date 09/18/1837)

    No record of hearing

    09/25/1837

    Reported

    09/25/1837

    Confirmed

    6

    6

    Peter Daniel of Virginia

    Van Buren

    02/27/1841

    (Nom. date 02/26/1841)

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    03/02/1841

    Confirmed (22-5)

    3

    John Spencer of New York

    Tyler

    01/09/1844

    (Nom. date 01/08/1844

    No record of hearing

    01/30/1844

    Reported

    01/31/1844

    Rejected (21-26)

    21

    22

    Reuben Walworth of New York

    Tyler

    03/13/1844

    No record of hearing

    06/14/1844

    Reported

    Tabled, 06/15/1844 (27-20)

    93

    96

    06/17/1844

    Withdrawn

    Edward King of Pennsylvania

    Tyler

    06/05/1844

    No record of hearing

    06/14/1844

    Reported

    06/15/1844

    Tabled (29-18)

    9

    10

    John Spencer of New York

    Tyler

    06/17/1844

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    06/17/1844

    Withdrawn

    0

    Reuben Walworth of New York

    Tyler

    06/17/1844

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    Motion to proceed objected to, 06/17/1844.
    Motion to refer to Judiciary Committee rejected by
    05/09/1826 Confirmed


    27
    of Kentucky
    (Nom. date
    Senate, 05/09/1826
    (27-5)
    04/11/1826)
    (7-25)
    John
    J. Q. Adams
    12/18/1828
    No record
    01/26/1829
    Reported with
    02/12/1829 Postponed

    39
    56
    Crittenden of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    recommen-
    (23-17)
    Kentucky
    12/17/1828)
    dation not to act
    John McLean of Jackson
    03/06/1829
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee. 03/07/1829 Confirmed


    1
    Ohio
    Henry Baldwin Jackson
    01/05/1830
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee. 01/06/1830 Confirmed


    1
    of Pennsylvania
    (Nom. date
    (41-2)
    01/04/1830)
    James M.
    Jackson
    01/07/1835
    No record
    01/09/1835
    Reported
    01/09/1835 Confirmed

    2
    2
    Wayne of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    Georgia
    01/06/1835)
    Roger B. Taney Jackson
    01/15/1835
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee. 03/03/1835 Postponed


    47
    of Maryland
    (24-21)
    CRS-24

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Roger B. Taney Jackson
    12/28/1835
    No record
    01/05/1836
    Reported
    Motion to proceed,

    8
    78
    of Maryland
    of hearing
    03/14/1836
    (C. J.)
    (25-19)
    03/15/1836 Confirmed
    (29-15)
    Philip P.
    Jackson
    12/28/1835
    No record
    01/05/1836
    Reported
    Motion to proceed,

    8
    78
    Barbour of
    of hearing
    03/15/1836
    Virginia
    (25-20)
    03/15/1836 Confirmed
    (30-11)
    Wil iam Smith Jackson
    03/03/1837
    No record
    03/08/1837
    Reported
    03/08/1837 Confirmed

    5
    5
    of Alabama
    of hearing
    (23-18)
    (Nominee
    declined)
    John Catron of Jackson
    03/03/1837
    No record
    03/08/1837
    Reported
    03/08/1837 Confirmed

    5
    5
    Tennessee
    of hearing
    (28-15)
    John McKinley Van Buren
    Recess Appointment, 04/22/1837
    of Alabama
    09/19/1837
    No record
    09/25/1837
    Reported
    09/25/1837 Confirmed

    6
    6
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    09/18/1837)
    Peter V. Daniel Van Buren
    02/27/1841
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee. 03/02/1841 Confirmed


    3
    of Virginia
    (Nom. date
    (22-5)
    02/26/1841)
    John C.
    Tyler
    01/09/1844
    No record
    01/30/1844
    Reported
    01/31/1844
    Rejected

    21
    22
    Spencer of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    (21-26)
    New York
    01/08/1844
    CRS-25

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Reuben H.
    Tyler
    03/13/1844
    No record
    06/14/1844
    Reported
    Tabled, 06/15/1844

    93
    96
    Walworth of
    of hearing
    (27-20)
    New York
    06/17/1844 Withdrawn
    Edward King of Tyler
    06/05/1844
    No record
    06/14/1844
    Reported
    06/15/1844
    Tabled

    9
    10
    Pennsylvania
    of hearing
    (29-18)
    John C.
    Tyler
    06/17/1844
    06/17/1844 Withdrawn


    0
    Spencer of
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    New York
    Reuben H.
    Tyler
    06/17/1844
    Motion to proceed



    Walworth of
    objected to, 06/17/1844.
    New York
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    Senate adjourned on
    Senate adjourned on same day, with no record same day, with no record
    of further action.of further action.
    Reuben H.
    Tyler
    12/10/1844
    No record
    01/21/1845
    Reported
    Tabled,

    42
    58
    Walworth of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    01/21/1845
    New York
    12/04/1844)
    02/06/1845 Withdrawn
    Edward King of Tyler
    12/10/1844
    No record
    01/21/1845
    Reported
    Tabled,

    42
    60
    Pennsylvania
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    01/21/1845
    12/04/1844)
    02/08/1845 Withdrawn
    Samuel Nelson Tyler
    02/06/1845
    No record
    02/08/1845
    Reported
    02/14/1845 Confirmed

    2
    8
    of New York
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    02/04/1845)
    CRS-26

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    John M. Read
    Tyler
    02/08/1845
    No record
    02/14/1845
    Reported
    No record of action

    6

    of Pennsylvania

    of hearing
    (Nom. date
    02/07/1845)
    George W.
    Polk
    12/23/1845
    No record
    01/20/1846
    Reported
    Motion to postpone

    28
    30
    Woodward of
    of hearing
    rejected, 01/22/1846
    Pennsylvania
    (21-28)
    01/22/1846
    Rejected
    (20-29)
    Levi
    Polk
    Recess Appointment, 09/20/1845
    Woodbury
    of New
    12/23/1845
    No record
    01/03/1846
    Reported
    01/03/1846 Confirmed

    11
    11
    Hampshire
    of hearing
    Robert C.
    Polk
    08/03/1846
    No record
    08/04/1846
    Reported
    08/04/1846 Confirmed

    1
    1
    Grier of
    of hearing
    Pennsylvania
    Benjamin R.
    Fil more
    Recess Appointment, 09/22/1851
    Curtis of Mass.
    12/12/1851
    No record
    12/23/1851
    Reported
    12/23/1851 Confirmed

    11
    11
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    12/11/1851)
    Edward A.
    Fil more
    08/21/1852
    No record
    08/30/1852
    Reported
    08/31/1852
    Tabled

    9
    10
    Bradford of
    (Nom. Date
    of hearing
    Louisiana
    08/16/1852)
    George E.
    Fil more
    01/10/1853
    02/11/1853 Postponed


    32
    Badger of
    (Nom. Date
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    (26-25)
    North Carolina
    01/03/1853)
    CRS-27

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Wil iam C.
    Fil more
    02/24/1853
    No record
    Referred to Judiciary Committee on 02/24/1853. Senate



    Micou of
    (Nom. Date
    of hearing
    ordered committee discharged of nomination on same
    Louisiana
    02/14/1853)
    day; no record of Senate consideration after discharge.
    John A.
    Pierce
    03/21/1853
    No record
    03/22/1853
    Reported
    03/22/1853 Confirmed

    1
    1
    Campbell of
    of hearing
    Alabama
    Nathan
    Buchanan
    12/09/1857
    No record
    01/06/1858
    Reported
    01/12/1858 Confirmed

    28
    34
    Clifford of
    of hearing
    (26-23)
    Maine
    Jeremiah S.
    Buchanan
    02/06/1861
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee. 02/21/1861 Motion to


    15
    Black of
    (Nom. Date
    proceed
    Pennsylvania
    02/05/1861)
    rejected
    (25-26)
    Noah H.
    Lincoln
    01/22/1862
    No record
    01/24/1862
    Reported
    01/24/1862 Confirmed

    2
    2
    Swayne of
    (Nom. Date
    of hearing
    (38-1)
    Ohio
    01/21/1862)
    Samuel F.
    Lincoln
    07/16/1862
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee. 07/16/1862 Confirmed


    0
    Mil er
    of Iowa
    David Davis of Lincoln
    Recess Appointment, 10/17/1862
    Il inois
    12/03/1862
    No record
    12/05/1862
    Reported
    12/08/1862 Confirmed

    2
    5
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    12/01/1862)
    Stephen J. Field Lincoln
    03/07/1863
    No record
    03/09/1863
    Reported
    03/10/1863 Confirmed

    2
    3
    of California
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    03/06/1863
    CRS-28

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Salmon P.
    Lincoln
    12/06/1864
    12/06/1864 Confirmed


    0
    Chase of Ohio
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    (C. J.)
    Henry
    A. Johnson
    04/16/1866
    No record
    Referred to Judiciary Committee on 04/16/1866. No



    Stanbery of
    of hearing
    record of committee vote, and no record of Senate
    Ohio
    action after referral.
    Ebenezer R.
    Grant
    12/15/1869
    No record
    12/22/1869
    Reported
    02/03/1870
    Rejected

    7
    50
    Hoar of Mass.
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    adversely
    (24-33)
    12/14/1869)
    Edwin M.
    Grant
    12/20/1869
    12/20/1869 Confirmed


    0
    Stanton of
    (46-11)
    Pennsylvania
    (Nominee
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee
    died before
    assuming
    office)
    Wil iam Strong Grant
    02/08/1870
    No record
    02/14/1870
    Reported
    02/18/1870 Confirmed

    6
    10
    of Pennsylvania
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    favorably
    02/07/1870)
    Joseph P.
    Grant
    02/08/1870
    No record
    02/14/1870
    Reported
    Postponed,

    6
    41
    Bradley of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    favorably
    03/02/1870
    New Jersey
    02/07/1870)
    (31-26)

    Reuben Walworth of New York

    Tyler

    12/10/1844

    (Nom. date 12/04/1844)

    No record of hearing

    01/21/1845

    Reported

    Tabled, 01/21/1845

    42

    58

    02/06/1845

    Withdrawn

    Edward King of Pennsylvania

    Tyler

    12/10/1844

    (Nom. date 12/04/1844)

    No record of hearing

    01/21/1845

    Reported

    Tabled, 01/21/1845

    42

    60

    02/08/1845

    Withdrawn

    Samuel Nelson of New York

    Tyler

    02/06/1845

    (Nom. date 02/04/1845)

    No record of hearing

    02/08/1845

    Reported

    02/14/1845

    Confirmed

    2

    8

    John Read of Pennsylvania

    Tyler

    02/08/1845

    (Nom. date 02/07/1845)

    No record of hearing

    02/14/1845

    Reported

    No record of action

    6

    George Woodward of Pennsylvania

    Polk

    12/23/1845

    No record of hearing

    01/20/1846

    Reported

    Motion to postpone rejected, 01/22/1846 (21-28)

    28

    30

    01/22/1846

    Rejected (20-29) Levi Woodbury of New Hampshire

    Polk

    Recess Appointment, 09/20/1845

    12/23/1845

    No record of hearing

    01/03/1846

    Reported

    01/03/1846

    Confirmed

    11

    11

    Robert Grier of Pennsylvania

    Polk

    08/03/1846

    No record of hearing

    08/04/1846

    Reported

    08/04/1846

    Confirmed

    1

    1

    Benjamin Curtis of Mass.

    Fillmore

    Recess Appointment, 09/22/1851

    12/12/1851

    (Nom. date 12/11/1851)

    No record of hearing

    12/23/1851

    Reported

    12/23/1851

    Confirmed

    11

    11

    Edward Bradford of Louisiana

    Fillmore

    08/21/1852

    (Nom. Date 08/16/1852)

    No record of hearing

    08/30/1852

    Reported

    08/31/1852

    Tabled

    9

    10

    George Badger of North Carolina

    Fillmore

    01/10/1853

    (Nom. Date 01/03/1853)

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    02/11/1853

    Postponed (26-25)

    32

    William Micou of Louisiana

    Fillmore

    02/24/1853

    (Nom. Date 02/14/1853)

    No record of hearing Referred to Judiciary Committee on 02/24/1853. Senate ordered committee discharged of nomination on same day; no record of Senate consideration after discharge.

    John Campbell of Alabama

    Pierce

    03/21/1853

    No record of hearing

    03/22/1853

    Reported

    03/22/1853

    Confirmed

    1

    1

    Nathan Clifford of Maine

    Buchanan

    12/09/1857

    No record of hearing

    01/06/1858

    Reported

    01/12/1858

    Confirmed (26-23)

    28

    34

    Jeremiah Black of Pennsylvania

    Buchanan

    02/06/1861

    (Nom. Date 02/05/1861)

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    02/21/1861

    Motion to proceed rejected (25-26)

    15

    Noah Swayne of Ohio

    Lincoln

    01/22/1862

    (Nom. Date 01/21/1862)

    No record of hearing

    01/24/1862

    Reported

    01/24/1862

    Confirmed (38-1)

    2

    2

    Samuel Miller of Iowa

    Lincoln

    07/16/1862

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    07/16/1862

    Confirmed

    0

    David Davis of Illinois

    Lincoln

    Recess Appointment, 10/17/1862

    12/03/1862

    (Nom. date 12/01/1862)

    No record of hearing

    12/05/1862

    Reported

    12/08/1862

    Confirmed

    2

    5

    Stephen Field of California

    Lincoln

    03/07/1863

    (Nom. date 03/06/1863

    No record of hearing

    03/09/1863

    Reported

    03/10/1863

    Confirmed

    2

    3

    Salmon Chase of Ohio (C. J.)

    Lincoln

    12/06/1864

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    12/06/1864

    Confirmed

    0

    Henry Stanbery of Ohio

    A. Johnson

    04/16/1866

    No record of hearing Referred to Judiciary Committee on 04/16/1866. No record of committee vote, and no record of Senate action after referral.

    Ebenezer Hoar of Mass.

    Grant

    12/15/1869

    (Nom. date 12/14/1869)

    No record of hearing

    12/22/1869

    Reported adversely

    02/03/1870

    Rejected (24-33)

    7

    50

    Edwin Stanton of Pennsylvania

    Grant

    12/20/1869

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee

    12/20/1869

    Confirmed (46-11) (Nominee died before assuming office)

    0

    William Strong of Pennsylvania

    Grant

    02/08/1870

    (Nom. date 02/07/1870)

    No record of hearing

    02/14/1870

    Reported favorably

    02/18/1870

    Confirmed

    6

    10

    Joseph Bradley of New Jersey

    Grant

    02/08/1870

    (Nom. date 02/07/1870)

    No record of hearing

    02/14/1870

    Reported favorably

    Postponed, 03/02/1870 (31-26)

    6

    41

    Motion to postpone
    Motion to postpone
    rejected, 03/02/1870rejected, 03/02/1870
    (23-28)(23-28)
    03/21/1870 Confirmed
    (46-9)
    CRS-29

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Ward Hunt
    Grant
    12/06/1872
    No record
    12/11/1872
    Reported
    12/11/1872 Confirmed

    5
    5
    of New York
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    favorably
    12/03/1872)
    George H.
    Grant
    12/02/1873
    No record
    12/11/1873
    Reported
    Recommitted,

    9
    37
    Wil iams of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    favorably
    12/15/1873
    Oregon (C. J.)
    12/01/1873)
    Closed


    01/08/1874 Withdrawn
    hearingsd
    12/16/1873
    12/17/1873
    Caleb Cushing Grant
    01/09/1874
    No record
    01/09/1874
    Reported
    01/14/1874 Withdrawn

    0
    5
    of Mass. (C. J.)
    of hearing
    favorably
    Morrison R.
    Grant
    01/19/1874
    No record
    01/20/1874
    Reported
    01/21/1874 Confirmed

    1
    2
    Waite of Ohio
    of hearing
    favorably
    (63-0)
    (C. J.)
    John Marshall
    Hayes
    10/17/1877
    No record
    11/26/1877
    Reported
    11/29/1877 Confirmed

    40
    43
    Harlan of

    of hearing
    favorably
    Kentucky
    (Nom. date
    10/16/1877)
    Wil iam B.
    Hayes
    12/15/1880
    No record
    12/20/1880
    Reported
    12/21/1880 Confirmed

    5
    6
    Woods of
    of hearing
    favorably
    (39-8)
    Georgia
    Tabled motion to
    reconsider, 12/22/1880
    (36-3)
    Stanley
    Hayes
    01/26/1881
    No record
    Considered , 02/07/1881
    No record of action

    19

    Matthews of
    of hearing
    Ohio
    02/14/1881
    Postponed
    CRS-30

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Stanley
    Garfield
    03/18/1881
    No record
    05/09/1881
    Reported
    05/12/1881 Confirmed

    52
    55
    Matthews of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    adversely
    (24-23)
    Ohio
    03/14/1881)
    (6-1)
    Horace Gray
    Arthur
    12/19/1881
    No record
    12/20/1881
    Reported
    12/20/1881 Confirmed

    1
    1
    of Mass.
    of hearing
    favorably
    (51-5)
    Roscoe
    Arthur
    02/24/1882
    No record
    03/02/1882
    Reported
    03/02/1882 Confirmed

    6
    6
    Conkling of
    of hearing
    favorably
    (39-12)
    New York
    (Nominee
    declined)
    Samuel
    Arthur
    03/13/1882
    No record
    03/22/1882
    Reported
    03/22/1882 Confirmed

    9
    9
    Blatchford of
    of hearing
    favorably
    New York
    Lucius Q. C.
    Cleveland
    12/12/1887
    No record
    01/10/1888
    Reported
    01/16/1888 Confirmed

    29
    35
    Lamar of
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    adversely
    (32-28)
    Mississippi
    12/06/1887)
    (5-4)
    Melvil e W.
    Cleveland
    05/02/1888
    No record
    07/02/1888
    Reported
    07/20/1888 Confirmed

    61
    79
    Ful er of Il inois
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    without
    (41-20)
    (C. J.)
    04/30/1888)
    recommen-
    dation
    David J.
    Harrison
    12/04/1889
    No record
    12/16/1889
    Reported
    Motion to postpone

    12
    14
    Brewer of
    of hearing
    favorably
    rejected, 12/18/1889
    Kansas
    (15-54)
    Motion to postpone
    rejected, 12/18/1889
    (25-45)
    12/18/1889 Confirmed
    (53-11)
    CRS-31

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Henry B.
    Harrison
    12/23/1890
    No record
    12/29/1890
    Reported
    12/29/1890 Confirmed

    6
    6
    Brown of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Michigan
    George Shiras Harrison
    07/19/1892
    No record
    07/25/1892
    Reported
    07/26/1892 Confirmed

    6
    7
    Jr. of
    of hearing
    without
    Pennsylvania
    recommen-
    dation
    Howell E.
    Harrison
    02/02/1893
    No record
    02/13/1893
    Reported
    02/18/1893 Confirmed

    11
    16
    Jackson of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Tennessee
    Wil iam B.
    Cleveland
    09/19/1893
    No record
    Considered, 09/25/1893
    No record of action



    Hornblower of
    of hearing
    and 10/25 & 30/1893
    New York
    Wil iam B.
    Cleveland
    12/06/1893
    No record
    Considered, 12/11, 14 & 18/1893
    01/15/1894
    Rejected

    33
    40
    Hornblower of

    of hearing
    (24-30)
    New York
    01/08/1894
    Reported
    (Nom. date
    adversely
    12/05/1893)
    Wheeler H.
    Cleveland
    01/22/1894
    No record
    On question of reporting favorably, 02/16/1894
    Rejected

    21
    25
    Peckham of
    of hearing
    committee vote divided,
    (32-41)
    New York
    02/12/1894
    (5-5)
    02/12/1894
    Reported
    without
    recommen-
    dation
    CRS-32

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Edward D.
    Cleveland
    02/19/1894
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee 02/19/1894 Confirmed


    0
    White of
    Louisiana
    Rufus W.
    Cleveland
    12/03/1895
    No record
    12/09/1895
    Reported
    12/09/1895 Confirmed

    6
    6
    Peckham of
    of hearing
    favorably
    New York
    Joseph
    McKinley
    12/16/1897
    No record
    01/13/1898
    Reported
    01/21/1898 Confirmed

    28
    36
    McKenna of
    of hearing
    favorably
    California
    Oliver Wendell T. Roosevelt
    12/02/1902
    No record
    12/04/1902
    Reported
    12/04/1902 Confirmed

    2
    2
    Holmes of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Mass.
    Wil iam R. Day T. Roosevelt
    02/19/1903
    No record
    02/23/1903
    Reported
    02/23/1903 Confirmed

    4
    4
    of Ohio
    of hearing
    favorably
    Wil iam H.
    T. Roosevelt
    12/03/1906
    No record
    12/10/1906
    Reported
    12/12/1906 Confirmed

    7
    9
    Moody of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Mass.
    Horace H.
    Taft
    12/13/1909
    No record
    12/16/1909
    Reported
    12/20/1909 Confirmed

    3
    7
    Lurton of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Tennessee
    Charles Evans Taft
    04/25/1910
    No record
    05/02/1910
    Reported
    05/02/1910 Confirmed

    7
    7
    Hughes of
    of hearing
    favorably
    New York
    Edward D.
    Taft
    12/12/1910
    12/12/1910 Confirmed


    0
    White of
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    Louisiana
    (C. J.)
    CRS-33

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Wil is Van
    Taft
    12/12/1910
    No record
    12/15/1910
    Reported
    12/15/1910 Confirmed

    3
    3
    Devanter of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Wyoming
    Joseph R.
    Taft
    12/12/1910
    No record
    12/15/1910
    Reported
    12/15/1910 Confirmed

    3
    3
    Lamar of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Georgia
    Mahlon Pitney Taft
    02/19/1912
    No record
    03/04/1912
    Reported
    03/13/1912 Confirmed

    14
    23
    of New Jersey
    of hearing
    favorably
    (50-26)
    James C.
    Wilson
    08/19/1914
    No record
    08/24/1914
    Reported
    08/29/1914 Confirmed

    5
    10
    McReynolds of
    of hearing
    favorably
    (44-6)
    Tennessee
    Louis D.
    Wilson
    01/28/1916
    02/09/1916
    05/24/1916
    Reported
    06/01/1916 Confirmed
    12
    117
    125
    Brandeis of
    02/10/1916
    favorably
    (47-22)
    Mass.
    02/15/1916
    (10-8)
    02/16/1916
    02/17/1916
    02/18/1916
    02/24/1916
    02/25/1916
    02/26/1916
    02/29/1916
    03/01/1916
    03/02/1916
    03/03/1916
    03/04/1916
    03/06/1916
    03/07/1916
    03/08/1916
    03/14/1916
    03/15/1916
    CRS-34

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    John H. Clarke Wilson
    07/14/1916
    No record
    07/24/1916
    Reported
    07/24/1916 Confirmed

    10
    10
    of Ohio
    of hearing
    favorably
    Wil iam
    Harding
    06/30/1921
    06/30/1921 Confirmed


    0
    Howard Taft of
    (60-4) e
    Connecticut
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    (C. J.)
    George
    Harding
    09/05/1922
    09/05/1922 Confirmed


    0
    Sutherland of
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    Utah
    Pierce Butler
    Harding
    11/23/1922
    No record
    11/28/1922
    Reported
    Placed on Executive

    5

    of Minnesota
    (Nom. date
    of hearing
    favorably
    Calendar, 11/28/1922,
    11/21/1922)
    with no record of further
    action
    Pierce Butler
    Harding
    12/05/1922
    Closed hearings
    12/18/1922
    Reported
    Motion to recommit

    13
    16
    of Minnesota
    12/09/1922
    favorably
    defeated, 12/21/1922
    12/13/1922
    (7-63)
    12/21/1922 Confirmed
    (61-8)
    Edward T.
    Harding
    01/24/1923
    No record
    01/29/1923
    Reported
    01/29/1923 Confirmed

    5
    5
    Sanford of
    of hearing
    favorably
    Tennessee
    Harlan F. Stone Coolidge
    01/05/1925
    Closed hearing
    Reported favorably
    Recommitted

    28
    31
    of New York
    01/12/1925f
    01/21/1925
    01/26/1925
    01/28/1925
    02/02/1925
    Reported
    02/05/1925 Confirmed
    23
    (after 01/26/1925
    favorably
    (71-6)
    recomt’l) f
    CRS-35

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Charles Evans Hoover
    02/03/1930
    No hearing held
    02/10/1930
    Reported
    Motion to recommit

    7
    10
    Hughes of
    favorably
    rejected, 02/13/1930 (31-
    New York
    (10-2)
    49)
    (C. J.)
    02/13/1930 Confirmed
    (52-26)
    John J. Parker
    Hoover
    03/21/1930
    04/05/1930
    04/21/1930
    Reported
    05/07/1930
    Rejected
    15
    31
    47
    of North
    adversely (10-6)
    (39-41)
    Carolina
    Owen J.
    Hoover
    05/09/1930
    No hearing held
    05/19/1930
    Reported
    05/20/1930 Confirmed

    10
    11
    Roberts of
    favorably
    Pennsylvania
    Benjamin N.
    Hoover
    02/15/1932
    02/19/1932
    02/23/1932
    Reported
    02/24/1932 Confirmed
    4
    8
    9
    Cardozo of
    favorably
    New York
    Hugo L. Black F. Roosevelt
    08/12/1937
    No hearing held
    08/16/1937
    Reported
    Motion to recommit

    4
    5
    of Alabama
    favorably (13-4)
    rejected, 08/17/1937
    (15-66)
    08/17/1937 Confirmed
    (63-16)
    Stanley F. Reed F. Roosevelt
    01/15/1938
    01/20/1938
    01/24/1938
    Reported
    01/25/1938 Confirmed
    5
    9
    10
    of Kentucky
    favorably
    Felix
    F. Roosevelt
    01/05/1939
    01/10/1939
    01/16/1939
    Reported
    01/17/1939 Confirmed
    5
    11
    12
    Frankfurter of
    01/11/1939
    favorably
    Mass.
    01/12/1939
    Wil iam O.
    F. Roosevelt
    03/20/1939
    03/24/1939
    03/27/1939
    Reported
    04/04/1939 Confirmed
    4
    7
    15
    Douglas of
    favorably
    (62-4)
    Connecticut
    CRS-36

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Frank Murphy F. Roosevelt
    01/04/1940
    01/11/1940
    01/15/1940
    Reported
    01/16/1940 Confirmed
    7
    11
    12
    of Michigan
    favorably
    Harlan F. Stone F. Roosevelt
    06/12/1941
    06/21/1941
    06/23/1941
    Reported
    06/27/1941 Confirmed
    9
    11
    15
    of New York
    favorably
    (C. J.)
    James F. Byrnes F. Roosevelt
    06/12/1941
    06/12/1941 Confirmed


    0
    of South
    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.
    Carolina
    Robert H.
    F. Roosevelt
    06/12/1941
    06/21/1941
    06/30/1941
    Reported
    07/07/1941 Confirmed
    9
    18
    25
    Jackson of
    06/231941
    favorably
    New York
    06/27/1941
    06/30/1941
    Wiley B.
    F. Roosevelt
    01/11/1943
    01/22/1943
    02/01/1943
    Reported
    02/08/1943 Confirmed
    11
    21
    28
    Rutledge of
    favorably
    Iowa
    Harold H.
    Truman
    09/18/1945
    No hearing held
    09/19/1945
    Reported
    09/19/1945 Confirmed

    1
    1
    Burton of Ohio
    favorably
    Fred M. Vinson Truman
    06/06/1946
    06/14/1946
    06/19/1946
    Reported
    06/20/1946 Confirmed
    8
    13
    14
    of Kentucky
    favorably
    (C. J.)
    Tom C. Clark Truman
    08/02/1949
    08/09/1949
    08/12/1949
    Reported
    08/18/1949 Confirmed
    7
    10
    16
    of Texas
    08/10/1949
    favorably
    (73-8)
    08/11/1949
    (9-2)
    CRS-37

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Sherman
    Truman
    09/15/1949
    09/27/1949
    10/03/1949
    Reported
    Motion to
    12
    18
    19
    Minton of
    favorably
    recommit rejected,
    Indiana
    (9-2)
    10/04/1949
    (21-45)
    10/04/1949 Confirmed
    (48-16)
    Earl Warren of Eisenhower
    Recess Appointment, 10/02/1953
    California (C.
    J.)
    01/11/1954
    02/02/1954
    02/24/1954
    Reported
    03/01/1954 Confirmed
    22
    44
    49
    02/19/1954
    favorably
    (12-3)
    John M. Harlan Eisenhower
    11/09/1954
    No hearing held

    03/21/1870

    Confirmed (46-9) Ward Hunt of New York

    Grant

    12/06/1872

    (Nom. date 12/03/1872)

    No record of hearing

    12/11/1872

    Reported favorably

    12/11/1872

    Confirmed

    5

    5

    George Williams of Oregon (C. J.)

    Grant

    12/02/1873

    (Nom. date 12/01/1873)

    No record of hearing

    12/11/1873

    Reported favorably

    Recommitted, 12/15/1873

    9

    37

    Closed hearingsd12/16/1873 12/17/1873

    01/08/1874

    Withdrawn

    Caleb Cushing of Mass. (C. J.)

    Grant

    01/09/1874

    No record of hearing

    01/09/1874

    Reported favorably

    01/14/1874

    Withdrawn

    0

    5

    Morrison Waite of Ohio (C. J.)

    Grant

    01/19/1874

    No record of hearing

    01/20/1874

    Reported favorably

    01/21/1874

    Confirmed (63-0)

    1

    2

    John Marshall Harlan of Kentucky

    Hayes

    10/17/1877

    (Nom. date 10/16/1877)

    No record of hearing

    11/26/1877

    Reported favorably

    11/29/1877

    Confirmed

    40

    43

    William Woods of Georgia

    Hayes

    12/15/1880

    No record of hearing

    12/20/1880

    Reported favorably

    12/21/1880

    Confirmed (39-8)

    5

    6

    Tabled motion to reconsider, 12/22/1880 (36-3)

    Stanley Matthews of Ohio

    Hayes

    01/26/1881

    No record of hearing

    Considered , 02/07/1881

    No record of action

    19

    02/14/1881

    Postponed

    Stanley Matthews of Ohio

    Garfield

    03/18/1881

    (Nom. date 03/14/1881)

    No record of hearing

    05/09/1881

    Reported adversely (6-1)

    05/12/1881

    Confirmed (24-23)

    52

    55

    Horace Gray of Mass.

    Arthur

    12/19/1881

    No record of hearing

    12/20/1881

    Reported favorably

    12/20/1881

    Confirmed (51-5)

    1

    1

    Roscoe Conkling of New York

    Arthur

    02/24/1882

    No record of hearing

    03/02/1882

    Reported favorably

    03/02/1882

    Confirmed (39-12) (Nominee declined)

    6

    6

    Samuel Blatchford of New York

    Arthur

    03/13/1882

    No record of hearing

    03/22/1882

    Reported favorably

    03/22/1882

    Confirmed

    9

    9

    Lucius Lamar of Mississippi

    Cleveland

    12/12/1887

    (Nom. date 12/06/1887)

    No record of hearing

    01/10/1888

    Reported adversely (5-4)

    01/16/1888

    Confirmed (32-28)

    29

    35

    Melville Fuller of Illinois (C. J.)

    Cleveland

    05/02/1888

    (Nom. date 04/30/1888)

    No record of hearing

    07/02/1888

    Reported without recommen-dation

    07/20/1888

    Confirmed (41-20)

    61

    79

    David Brewer of Kansas

    Harrison

    12/04/1889

    No record of hearing

    12/16/1889

    Reported favorably

    Motion to postpone rejected, 12/18/1889 (15-54)

    12

    14

    Motion to postpone rejected, 12/18/1889 (25-45)

    12/18/1889

    Confirmed (53-11)

    Henry Brown of Michigan

    Harrison

    12/23/1890

    No record of hearing

    12/29/1890

    Reported favorably

    12/29/1890

    Confirmed

    6

    6

    George Shiras Jr. of Pennsylvania

    Harrison

    07/19/1892

    No record of hearing

    07/25/1892

    Reported without recommen-dation

    07/26/1892

    Confirmed

    6

    7

    Howell Jackson of Tennessee

    Harrison

    02/02/1893

    No record of hearing

    02/13/1893

    Reported favorably

    02/18/1893

    Confirmed

    11

    16

    William Hornblower of New York

    Cleveland

    09/19/1893

    No record of hearing Considered, 09/25/1893 and 10/25 & 30/1893

    No record of action

    William Hornblower of New York

    Cleveland

    12/06/1893

    (Nom. date 12/05/1893)

    No record of hearing

    Considered, 12/11, 14 & 18/1893

    01/15/1894

    Rejected (24-30)

    33

    40

    01/08/1894

    Reported adversely

    Wheeler Peckham of New York

    Cleveland

    01/22/1894

    No record of hearing On question of reporting favorably, committee vote divided, 02/12/1894 (5-5)

    02/16/1894

    Rejected (32-41)

    21

    25

    02/12/1894

    Reported without recommen-dation

    Edward White of Louisiana

    Cleveland

    02/19/1894

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee

    02/19/1894

    Confirmed

    0

    Rufus Peckham of New York

    Cleveland

    12/03/1895

    No record of hearing

    12/09/1895

    Reported favorably

    12/09/1895

    Confirmed

    6

    6

    Joseph McKenna of California

    McKinley

    12/16/1897

    No record of hearing

    01/13/1898

    Reported favorably

    01/21/1898

    Confirmed

    28

    36

    Oliver Wendell Holmes of Mass.

    T. Roosevelt

    12/02/1902

    No record of hearing

    12/04/1902

    Reported favorably

    12/04/1902

    Confirmed

    2

    2

    William Day of Ohio

    T. Roosevelt

    02/19/1903

    No record of hearing

    02/23/1903

    Reported favorably

    02/23/1903

    Confirmed

    4

    4

    William Moody of Mass.

    T. Roosevelt

    12/03/1906

    No record of hearing

    12/10/1906

    Reported favorably

    12/12/1906

    Confirmed

    7

    9

    Horace Lurton of Tennessee

    Taft

    12/13/1909

    No record of hearing

    12/16/1909

    Reported favorably

    12/20/1909

    Confirmed

    3

    7

    Charles Evans Hughes of New York

    Taft

    04/25/1910

    No record of hearing

    05/02/1910

    Reported favorably

    05/02/1910

    Confirmed

    7

    7

    Edward White of Louisiana (C. J.)

    Taft

    12/12/1910

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    12/12/1910

    Confirmed

    0

    Willis Van Devanter of Wyoming

    Taft

    12/12/1910

    No record of hearing

    12/15/1910

    Reported favorably

    12/15/1910

    Confirmed

    3

    3

    Joseph Lamar of Georgia

    Taft

    12/12/1910

    No record of hearing

    12/15/1910

    Reported favorably

    12/15/1910

    Confirmed

    3

    3

    Mahlon Pitney of New Jersey

    Taft

    02/19/1912

    No record of hearing

    03/04/1912

    Reported favorably

    03/13/1912

    Confirmed (50-26)

    14

    23

    James McReynolds of Tennessee

    Wilson

    08/19/1914

    No record of hearing

    08/24/1914

    Reported favorably

    08/29/1914

    Confirmed (44-6)

    5

    10

    Louis Brandeis of Mass.

    Wilson

    01/28/1916

    02/09/1916 02/10/1916 02/15/1916 02/16/1916 02/17/1916 02/18/1916 02/24/1916 02/25/1916 02/26/1916 02/29/1916 03/01/1916 03/02/1916 03/03/1916 03/04/1916 03/06/1916 03/07/1916 03/08/1916 03/14/1916 03/15/1916

    05/24/1916

    Reported favorably (10-8)

    06/01/1916

    Confirmed (47-22)

    12

    117

    125

    John Clarke of Ohio

    Wilson

    07/14/1916

    No record of hearing

    07/24/1916

    Reported favorably

    07/24/1916

    Confirmed

    10

    10

    William Howard Taft of Connecticut (C. J.)

    Harding

    06/30/1921

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    06/30/1921

    Confirmed (60-4) e

    0

    George Sutherland of Utah

    Harding

    09/05/1922

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    09/05/1922

    Confirmed

    0

    Pierce Butler of Minnesota

    Harding

    11/23/1922

    (Nom. date 11/21/1922)

    No record of hearing

    11/28/1922

    Reported favorably

    Placed on Executive Calendar, 11/28/1922, with no record of further action

    5

    Pierce Butler of Minnesota

    Harding

    12/05/1922

    Closed hearings 12/09/1922 12/13/1922

    12/18/1922

    Reported favorably

    Motion to recommit defeated, 12/21/1922 (7-63)

    13

    16

    12/21/1922

    Confirmed (61-8)

    Edward Sanford of Tennessee

    Harding

    01/24/1923

    No record of hearing

    01/29/1923

    Reported favorably

    01/29/1923

    Confirmed

    5

    5

    Harlan Stone of New York

    Coolidge

    01/05/1925

    Closed hearing 01/12/1925f Reported favorably 01/21/1925 Recommitted 01/26/1925

    28

    31

    01/28/1925 (after 01/26/1925 recomt'l) f

    02/02/1925

    Reported favorably

    02/05/1925

    Confirmed (71-6)

    23

    Charles Evans Hughes of New York (C. J.)

    Hoover

    02/03/1930

    No hearing held

    02/10/1930

    Reported favorably (10-2)

    Motion to recommit rejected, 02/13/1930 (31-49)

    7

    10

    02/13/1930

    Confirmed (52-26)

    John Parker of North Carolina

    Hoover

    03/21/1930

    04/05/1930

    04/21/1930

    Reported adversely (10-6)

    05/07/1930

    Rejected (39-41)

    15

    31

    47

    Owen Roberts of Pennsylvania

    Hoover

    05/09/1930

    No hearing held

    05/19/1930

    Reported favorably

    05/20/1930

    Confirmed

    10

    11

    Benjamin Cardozo of New York

    Hoover

    02/15/1932

    02/19/1932

    02/23/1932

    Reported favorably

    02/24/1932

    Confirmed

    4

    8

    9

    Hugo Black of Alabama

    F. Roosevelt

    08/12/1937

    No hearing held

    08/16/1937

    Reported favorably (13-4)

    Motion to recommit rejected, 08/17/1937 (15-66)

    4

    5

    08/17/1937

    Confirmed (63-16)

    Stanley Reed of Kentucky

    F. Roosevelt

    01/15/1938

    01/20/1938

    01/24/1938

    Reported favorably

    01/25/1938

    Confirmed

    5

    9

    10

    Felix Frankfurter of Mass.

    F. Roosevelt

    01/05/1939

    01/10/1939 01/11/1939 01/12/1939

    01/16/1939

    Reported favorably

    01/17/1939

    Confirmed

    5

    11

    12

    William Douglas of Connecticut

    F. Roosevelt

    03/20/1939

    03/24/1939

    03/27/1939

    Reported favorably

    04/04/1939

    Confirmed (62-4)

    4

    7

    15

    Frank Murphy of Michigan

    F. Roosevelt

    01/04/1940

    01/11/1940

    01/15/1940

    Reported favorably

    01/16/1940

    Confirmed

    7

    11

    12

    Harlan Stone of New York (C. J.)

    F. Roosevelt

    06/12/1941

    06/21/1941

    06/23/1941

    Reported favorably

    06/27/1941

    Confirmed

    9

    11

    15

    James Byrnes of South Carolina

    F. Roosevelt

    06/12/1941

    Nomination was not referred to Judiciary Committee.

    06/12/1941

    Confirmed

    0

    Robert Jackson of New York

    F. Roosevelt

    06/12/1941

    06/21/1941 06/231941 06/27/1941 06/30/1941

    06/30/1941

    Reported favorably

    07/07/1941

    Confirmed

    9

    18

    25

    Wiley Rutledge of Iowa

    F. Roosevelt

    01/11/1943

    01/22/1943

    02/01/1943

    Reported favorably

    02/08/1943

    Confirmed

    11

    21

    28

    Harold Burton of Ohio

    Truman

    09/18/1945

    No hearing held

    09/19/1945

    Reported favorably

    09/19/1945

    Confirmed

    1

    1

    Fred Vinson of Kentucky (C. J.)

    Truman

    06/06/1946

    06/14/1946

    06/19/1946

    Reported favorably

    06/20/1946

    Confirmed

    8

    13

    14

    Tom Clark of Texas

    Truman

    08/02/1949

    08/09/1949 08/10/1949 08/11/1949

    08/12/1949

    Reported favorably (9-2)

    08/18/1949

    Confirmed (73-8)

    7

    10

    16

    Sherman Minton of Indiana

    Truman

    09/15/1949

    09/27/1949

    10/03/1949

    Reported favorably (9-2) Motion to recommit rejected, 10/04/1949 (21-45)

    12

    18

    19

    10/04/1949

    Confirmed (48-16)

    Earl Warren of California (C. J.)

    Eisenhower

    Recess Appointment, 10/02/1953

    01/11/1954

    02/02/1954 02/19/1954

    02/24/1954

    Reported favorably (12-3)

    03/01/1954

    Confirmed

    22

    44

    49

    John Harlan II of New York

    Eisenhower

    11/09/1954

    No hearing held

    Referred to Judiciary Committee on 11/09/1954. No record of committee vote or Senate action.

    John Harlan II of New York

    Eisenhower

    01/10/1955

    02/25/1955g

    03/10/1955

    Referred to Judiciary Committee on 11/09/1954. No record of



    II of New York
    committee vote or Senate action.
    John M. Harlan Eisenhower
    01/10/1955
    02/25/1955g
    03/10/1955
    Reported
    03/16/1955 Confirmed
    46
    59
    65
    II of New York
    favorably (10-4)
    (71-11)
    Wil iam J.
    Eisenhower
    Reported favorably (10-4)

    03/16/1955

    Confirmed (71-11)

    46

    59

    65

    William Brennan Jr. of New Jersey

    Eisenhower

    Recess Appointment, 10/15/1956
    Brennan Jr. of
    New Jersey
    01/14/1957
    02/26/1957
    03/04/1957
    Reported
    03/19/1957 Confirmed
    43
    49
    64
    02/27/1957
    favorably
    Charles E.
    Eisenhower
    03/02/1957
    03/18/1957
    03/18/1957
    Reported
    03/19/1957 Confirmed
    16
    16
    17
    Whittaker of
    favorably
    Missouri
    Potter Stewart Eisenhower
    Recess Appointment, 10/14/1958
    of Ohio
    01/17/1959
    04/09/1959
    04/20/1959
    Reported
    05/05/1959 Confirmed
    82
    93
    108
    04/14/1959
    favorably (12-3)
    (70-17)
    CRS-38

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Byron R.
    Kennedy
    04/03/1962
    04/11/1962
    04/11/1962
    Reported
    04/11/1962 Confirmed
    8
    8
    8
    White of
    favorably
    Colorado
    Arthur J.
    Kennedy
    08/31/1962
    09/11/1962
    09/25/1962
    Reported
    09/25/1962 Confirmed
    11
    25
    25
    Goldberg of
    09/13/1962
    favorably
    Il inois
    Abe Fortas of L. Johnson
    07/28/1965
    08/05/1965
    08/10/1965
    Reported
    08/11/1965 Confirmed
    8
    13
    14
    Tennessee
    favorably
    Thurgood
    L. Johnson
    06/13/1967
    07/13/1967
    08/03/1967
    Reported
    08/30/1967 Confirmed
    30
    51
    78
    Marshall of
    07/14/1967
    favorably (11-5)
    (69-11)
    New York
    07/18/1967
    07/19/1967
    07/24/1967
    Abe Fortas of L. Johnson
    06/26/1968
    07/11/1968
    09/17/1968
    Reported
    Cloture motion rejected,
    15
    83
    100
    Tennessee
    07/12/1968
    favorably (11-6)
    10/01/1968
    (C. J.)
    07/16/1968
    (45-43)h
    07/17/1968
    07/18/1968
    10/04/1968 Withdrawn
    07/19/1968
    07/20/1968
    07/22/1968
    07/23/1968
    09/13/1968
    09/16/1968
    CRS-39

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Homer
    L. Johnson
    06/26/1968
    07/11/1968
    Referred to Judiciary Committee,
    10/04/1968 Withdrawn
    15

    100
    Thornberry of
    07/12/1968
    06/26/1968.
    Texas
    07/16/1968
    No committee vote taken.
    07/17/1968
    07/18/1968
    07/19/1968
    07/20/1968
    07/22/1968
    07/23/1968
    09/13/1968
    09/16/1968
    Warren E.
    Nixon
    05/23/1969
    06/03/1969
    06/03/1969
    Reported
    06/09/1969 Confirmed
    11
    11
    17
    Burger of
    favorably
    (74-3)
    Virginia (C. J.)
    Clement F.
    Nixon
    08/21/1969
    09/16/1969
    10/09/1969
    Reported
    11/21/1969
    Rejected
    26
    49
    92
    Haynsworth Jr.
    09/17/1969
    favorably (10-7)
    (45-55)
    of South
    09/18/1969
    Carolina
    09/19/1969
    09/23/1969
    09/24/1969
    09/25/1969
    09/26/1969
    George
    Nixon
    01/19/1970
    01/27/1970
    02/16/1970
    Reported
    04/08/1970
    Rejected
    8
    28
    79
    Harrold
    01/28/1970
    favorably (13-4)
    (45-51)
    Carswell of
    01/29/1970
    Florida
    02/02/1970
    02/03/1970
    Harry A.
    Nixon
    04/15/1970
    04/29/1970
    05/06/1970
    Reported
    05/12/1970 Confirmed
    14
    21
    27
    Blackmun of
    favorably (17-0)
    (94-0)
    Minnesota
    CRS-40

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49 link to page 49 link to page 50
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Lewis F. Powell Nixon
    10/22/1971
    11/03/1971
    11/23/1971
    Reported
    12/06/1971 Confirmed
    12
    32
    45
    Jr. of Virginia
    11/04/1971
    favorably (16-0)
    (89-1)
    11/08/1971
    11/09/1971
    11/10/1971
    Wil iam H.
    Nixon
    10/22/1971
    11/03/1971
    11/23/1971
    Reported
    Cloture motion rejected,
    12
    32
    49
    Rehnquist of
    11/04/1971
    favorably (12-4)
    12/10/1971
    Arizona
    11/08/1971
    (52-42)i
    11/09/1971
    11/10/1971

    01/14/1957

    02/26/1957 02/27/1957

    03/04/1957

    Reported favorably

    03/19/1957

    Confirmed

    43

    49

    64

    Charles Whittaker of Missouri

    Eisenhower

    03/02/1957

    03/18/1957

    03/18/1957

    Reported favorably

    03/19/1957

    Confirmed

    16

    16

    17

    Potter Stewart of Ohio

    Eisenhower

    Recess Appointment, 10/14/1958

    01/17/1959

    04/09/1959 04/14/1959

    04/20/1959

    Reported favorably (12-3)

    05/05/1959

    Confirmed (70-17)

    82

    93

    108

    Byron White of Colorado

    Kennedy

    04/03/1962

    04/11/1962

    04/11/1962

    Reported favorably

    04/11/1962

    Confirmed

    8

    8

    8

    Arthur Goldberg of Illinois

    Kennedy

    08/31/1962

    09/11/1962 09/13/1962

    09/25/1962

    Reported favorably

    09/25/1962

    Confirmed

    11

    25

    25

    Abe Fortas of Tennessee

    L. Johnson

    07/28/1965

    08/05/1965

    08/10/1965

    Reported favorably

    08/11/1965

    Confirmed

    8

    13

    14

    Thurgood Marshall of New York

    L. Johnson

    06/13/1967

    07/13/1967 07/14/1967 07/18/1967 07/19/1967 07/24/1967

    08/03/1967

    Reported favorably (11-5)

    08/30/1967

    Confirmed (69-11)

    30

    51

    78

    Abe Fortas of Tennessee (C. J.)

    L. Johnson

    06/26/1968

    07/11/1968 07/12/1968 07/16/1968 07/17/1968 07/18/1968 07/19/1968 07/20/1968 07/22/1968 07/23/1968 09/13/1968 09/16/1968

    09/17/1968

    Reported favorably (11-6)

    Cloture motion rejected, 10/01/1968 (45-43)h

    15

    83

    100

    10/04/1968

    Withdrawn

    Homer Thornberry of Texas

    L. Johnson

    06/26/1968

    07/11/1968 07/12/1968 07/16/1968 07/17/1968 07/18/1968 07/19/1968 07/20/1968 07/22/1968 07/23/1968 09/13/1968 09/16/1968 Referred to Judiciary Committee, 06/26/1968. No committee vote taken.

    10/04/1968

    Withdrawn

    15

    100

    Warren Burger of Virginia (C. J.)

    Nixon

    05/23/1969

    06/03/1969

    06/03/1969

    Reported favorably

    06/09/1969

    Confirmed (74-3)

    11

    11

    17

    Clement Haynsworth Jr. of South Carolina

    Nixon

    08/21/1969

    09/16/1969 09/17/1969 09/18/1969 09/19/1969 09/23/1969 09/24/1969 09/25/1969 09/26/1969

    10/09/1969

    Reported favorably (10-7)

    11/21/1969

    Rejected (45-55)

    26

    49

    92

    George Harrold Carswell of Florida

    Nixon

    01/19/1970

    01/27/1970 01/28/1970 01/29/1970 02/02/1970 02/03/1970

    02/16/1970

    Reported favorably (13-4)

    04/08/1970

    Rejected (45-51)

    8

    28

    79

    Harry Blackmun of Minnesota

    Nixon

    04/15/1970

    04/29/1970

    05/06/1970

    Reported favorably (17-0)

    05/12/1970

    Confirmed (94-0)

    14

    21

    27

    Lewis Powell Jr. of Virginia

    Nixon

    10/22/1971

    11/03/1971 11/04/1971 11/08/1971 11/09/1971 11/10/1971

    11/23/1971

    Reported favorably (16-0)

    12/06/1971

    Confirmed (89-1)

    12

    32

    45

    William Rehnquist of Arizona

    Nixon

    10/22/1971

    11/03/1971 11/04/1971 11/08/1971 11/09/1971 11/10/1971

    11/23/1971

    Reported favorably (12-4)

    Cloture motion rejected, 12/10/1971 (52-42)i

    12

    32

    49

    Motion to postpone until
    Motion to postpone until
    01/18/1972 rejected, 01/18/1972 rejected,
    12/10/197112/10/1971
    (22-70)

    12/10/1971

    Confirmed (68-26)

    John Paul Stevens of Illinois

    Ford

    12/01/1975

    (Nom. Date 11/28/1975) 12/08/1975 12/09/1975 12/10/1975

    12/11/1975

    Reported favorably (13-0)

    12/17/1975

    Confirmed (98-0)

    7

    10

    16

    (22-70)
    12/10/1971 Confirmed
    (68-26)
    John Paul
    Ford
    12/01/1975
    12/08/1975
    12/11/1975
    Reported
    12/17/1975 Confirmed
    7
    10
    16
    Stevens of
    (Nom. Date
    12/09/1975
    favorably (13-0)
    (98-0)
    Il inois
    11/28/1975)
    12/10/1975
    Sandra Day
    Reagan
    08/19/1981
    09/09/1981
    09/15/1981
    Reported
    09/21/1981 Confirmed
    21
    27
    33
    O’Connor of
    09/10/1981
    favorably (17-1)
    (99-0)
    Arizona
    09/11/1981
    Wil iam H.
    Reagan
    06/20/1986
    07/29/1986
    08/14/1986
    Reported
    Cloture invoked,
    39
    55
    89
    Rehnquist of
    07/30/1986
    favorably (13-5)
    09/17/1986
    Arizona (C. J.)
    07/31/1986
    (68-31)j
    08/01/1986
    09/17/1986 Confirmed
    (65-33)
    Antonin Scalia Reagan
    06/24/1986
    08/05/1986
    08/14/1986
    Sandra Day O'Connor of Arizona

    Reagan

    08/19/1981

    09/09/1981 09/10/1981 09/11/1981

    09/15/1981

    Reported favorably (17-1)

    09/21/1981

    Confirmed (99-0)

    21

    27

    33

    William Rehnquist of Arizona (C. J.)

    Reagan

    06/20/1986

    07/29/1986 07/30/1986 07/31/1986 08/01/1986

    08/14/1986

    Reported favorably (13-5)

    Cloture invoked, 09/17/1986 (68-31)j

    39

    55

    89

    09/17/1986

    Confirmed (65-33)

    Antonin Scalia of Virginia

    Reagan

    06/24/1986

    08/05/1986 08/06/1986

    08/14/1986

    Reported favorably (18-0)

    09/17/1986

    Confirmed (98-0)

    42

    51

    85

    Robert Bork of District of Columbia

    Reagan

    07/07/1987

    09/15/1987 09/16/1987 09/17/1987 09/18/1987 09/19/1987 09/21/1987 09/22/1987 09/23/1987 09/25/1987 09/28/1987 09/29/1987 09/30/1987 Motion to report favorably rejected, 10/06/1987 (5-9)

    10/23/1987

    Rejected (42-58)

    70

    91

    108

    10/06/1987

    Reported unfavorably (9-5)

    On 10/29/1987, following the Senate's rejection of the nomination of Robert Bork, President Ronald Reagan announced his intention to nominate Douglas
    Reported
    09/17/1986 Confirmed
    42
    51
    85
    of Virginia
    08/06/1986
    favorably (18-0)
    (98-0)
    CRS-41

    link to page 48 link to page 48 link to page 49
    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Robert H.
    Reagan
    07/07/1987
    09/15/1987
    Motion to report favorably
    10/23/1987
    Rejected
    70
    91
    108
    Bork of
    09/16/1987
    rejected, 10/06/1987
    (42-58)
    District of
    09/17/1987
    (5-9)
    Columbia
    09/18/1987
    09/19/1987
    10/06/1987
    Reported
    09/21/1987
    unfavorably (9-5)
    09/22/1987
    09/23/1987
    09/25/1987
    09/28/1987
    09/29/1987
    09/30/1987
    On 10/29/1987, fol owing the Senate’s rejection of the nomination of Robert H. Bork, President Ronald Reagan announced his intention to nominate Douglas H. Ginsburg of
    Ginsburg of the District of Columbia to be Associate Justice. Ginsburg, however, withdrew his name from consideration on 11/07/1987, before an official nomination had been made.the District of Columbia to be Associate Justice. Ginsburg, however, withdrew his name from consideration on 11/07/1987, before an official nomination had been made.

    Anthony Kennedy of California

    Reagan

    Anthony M.
    Reagan
    11/30/198711/30/1987
    12/14/1987
    01/27/1988
    Reported
    02/03/1988 Confirmed
    14
    58
    65
    Kennedy of
    12/15/1987
    favorably (14-0)
    (97-0)
    California
    12/16/1987
    David H.
    G. H. W.
    07/25/1990
    09/13/1990
    09/27/1990
    Reported
    10/02/1990 Confirmed
    50
    64
    69
    Souter of New Bush
    09/14/1990
    favorably (13-1)
    (90-9)
    Hampshire
    09/17/1990
    09/18/1990
    09/19/1990
    CRS-42

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Clarence
    G. H. W.
    07/08/1991
    09/10/1991
    Motion to report favorably
    UC agreement reached,
    64
    81
    99
    Thomas of
    Bush
    09/11/1991
    failed, 09/27/1991
    10/08/1991, to reschedule
    Virginia
    09/12/1991
    (7-7)k
    vote on confirmation
    09/13/1991
    from 10/08/1991 to
    09/16/1991
    10/15/991, to allow for
    09/17/1991
    additional hearings
    09/19/1991
    09/20/1991
    09/27/1991
    Reported
    10/15/1991 Confirmed
    10/11/1991
    without
    (52-48)
    10/12/1991
    recommen-
    10/13/1991
    dation
    (13-1)
    Ruth Bader
    Clinton
    06/22/1993
    07/20/1993
    07/29/1993
    Reported
    08/03/1993 Confirmed
    28
    37
    42
    Ginsburg of
    07/21/1993
    favorably (18-0)
    (96-3)
    New York
    07/22/1993
    07/23/1993
    Stephen G.
    Clinton
    05/17/1994
    07/12/1994
    07/19/1994
    Reported
    07/29/1994 Confirmed
    56
    63
    73
    Breyer of Mass.
    07/13/1994
    favorably (18-0)
    (87-9)
    07/14/1994
    07/15/1994
    John G.
    G. W. Bush
    07/29/2005
    Referred to Judiciary Committee,
    09/06/2005 Withdrawn


    39
    Roberts Jr. of
    07/29/2005. No hearing held and no
    Maryland
    committee vote taken.
    John G.
    G. W. Bush
    09/06/2005
    09/12/2005
    09/22/2005
    Reported
    09/29/2005 Confirmed
    6
    16
    23
    Roberts Jr. of
    09/13/2005
    favorably (13-5)
    (78-22)
    Maryland
    09/14/2005
    (C. J.)
    09/15/2005
    CRS-43

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Harriet E.
    G. W. Bush
    10/07/2005
    Referred to Judiciary Committee,
    10/28/2005 Withdrawn


    21
    Miers of Texas
    10/07/2005. No hearing held and no
    committee vote taken.
    Samuel A. Alito G. W. Bush
    11/10/2005
    01/09/2006
    01/24/2006
    Reported
    Cloture invoked,
    60
    75
    82
    Jr. of New
    01/10/2006
    favorably (10-8)
    01/30/2006
    Jersey
    01/11/2006
    (72-25)
    01/12/2006
    01/13/2006
    01/31/2006 Confirmed
    (58-42)
    Sonia
    Obama
    06/01/2009
    07/13/2009
    07/28/2009
    Reported
    08/06/2009 Confirmed
    42
    57
    66
    Sotomayor of
    07/14/2009
    favorably (13-6)
    (68-31)
    New York
    07/15/2009
    07/16/2009
    Elena Kagan of Obama
    05/10/2010
    06/28/2010
    07/20/2010
    Reported
    08/05/2010 Confirmed
    49
    71
    87
    Mass.
    06/29/2010
    favorably (13-6)
    (63-37)
    06/30/2010
    07/01/2010
    Merrick B.
    Obama
    03/16/2016
    No hearing held
    12/14/1987 12/15/1987 12/16/1987

    01/27/1988

    Reported favorably (14-0)

    02/03/1988

    Confirmed (97-0)

    14

    58

    65

    David Souter of New Hampshire

    G. H. W. Bush

    07/25/1990

    09/13/1990 09/14/1990 09/17/1990 09/18/1990 09/19/1990

    09/27/1990

    Reported favorably (13-1)

    10/02/1990

    Confirmed (90-9)

    50

    64

    69

    Clarence Thomas of Virginia

    G. H. W. Bush

    07/08/1991

    09/10/1991 09/11/1991 09/12/1991 09/13/1991 09/16/1991 09/17/1991 09/19/1991 09/20/1991 10/11/1991 10/12/1991 10/13/1991 Motion to report favorably failed, 09/27/1991 (7-7)k

    UC agreement reached, 10/08/1991, to reschedule vote on confirmation from 10/08/1991 to 10/15/991, to allow for additional hearings

    64

    81

    99

    09/27/1991

    Reported without recommen-dation (13-1)

    10/15/1991

    Confirmed (52-48)

    Ruth Bader Ginsburg of New York

    Clinton

    06/22/1993

    07/20/1993 07/21/1993 07/22/1993 07/23/1993

    07/29/1993

    Reported favorably (18-0)

    08/03/1993

    Confirmed (96-3)

    28

    37

    42

    Stephen Breyer of Mass.

    Clinton

    05/17/1994

    07/12/1994 07/13/1994 07/14/1994 07/15/1994

    07/19/1994

    Reported favorably (18-0)

    07/29/1994

    Confirmed (87-9)

    56

    63

    73

    John Roberts Jr. of Maryland

    G. W. Bush

    07/29/2005

    Referred to Judiciary Committee, 07/29/2005. No hearing held and no committee vote taken.

    09/06/2005

    Withdrawn

    39

    John Roberts Jr. of Maryland (C. J.)

    G. W. Bush

    09/06/2005

    09/12/2005 09/13/2005 09/14/2005 09/15/2005

    09/22/2005

    Reported favorably (13-5)

    09/29/2005

    Confirmed (78-22)

    6

    16

    23

    Harriet Miers of Texas

    G. W. Bush

    10/07/2005

    Referred to Judiciary Committee, 10/07/2005. No hearing held and no committee vote taken.

    10/28/2005

    Withdrawn

    21

    Samuel Alito Jr. of New Jersey

    G. W. Bush

    11/10/2005

    01/09/2006 01/10/2006 01/11/2006 01/12/2006 01/13/2006

    01/24/2006

    Reported favorably (10-8)

    Cloture invoked, 01/30/2006 (72-25)

    60

    75

    82

    01/31/2006

    Confirmed (58-42)

    Sonia Sotomayor of New York

    Obama

    06/01/2009

    07/13/2009 07/14/2009 07/15/2009 07/16/2009

    07/28/2009

    Reported favorably (13-6)

    08/06/2009

    Confirmed (68-31)

    42

    57

    66

    Elena Kagan of Mass.

    Obama

    05/10/2010

    06/28/201006/29/201006/30/201007/01/2010

    07/20/2010

    Reported favorably (13-6)

    08/05/2010

    Confirmed (63-37)

    49

    71

    87

    Merrick Garland of Maryland

    Obama

    03/16/2016

    No hearing held

    Referred to Judiciary Committee on 03/16/2016. With no
    Referred to Judiciary Committee on 03/16/2016. With no



    Garland of
    subsequent committee vote or Senate action taken, nomination subsequent committee vote or Senate action taken, nomination
    Maryland
    returned to President on 01/03/2017 at final adjournment of returned to President on 01/03/2017 at final adjournment of
    114th Congress.
    Neil M.
    Trump
    02/01/2017
    03/20/2017
    04/03/2017
    Reported
    Cloture motion rejected
    47
    61
    65
    Gorsuch of
    03/21/2017
    favorably (11-9)
    04/06/2017
    Colorado
    03/22/2017
    (55-45);
    03/23/2017
    114th Congress.

    Neil Gorsuch of Colorado

    Trump

    02/01/2017

    03/20/201703/21/201703/22/201703/23/2017

    04/03/2017

    Reported favorably (11-9)

    Cloture motion rejected04/06/2017(55-45);Upon reconsideration,
    Upon reconsideration,
    cloture invoked (55-45)l
    04/07/2017 Confirmed
    (54-45)
    CRS-44

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    Final action by Senate
    Days from date received in



    Senate committee actions
    or President
    Senate to:
    First
    Final
    Date
    Public
    public Committee action by
    received in
    hearing
    Final vote
    Final
    hearing
    final vote Senate or
    Nominee
    President
    Senatea
    date(s)
    dateb
    Final vote
    Date
    actionc
    date
    date
    President
    Brett M.
    Trump
    07/10/2018
    09/04/2018
    09/28/2018
    Reported
    Cloture invoked
    56
    80
    88
    Kavanaugh of
    09/05/2018
    Favorably (11-9)
    10/05/2018 (51-49)
    Maryland
    09/06/2018
    09/07/2018
    10/06/2018 Confirmed
    09/27/2018
    (50-48)
    Amy Coney
    Trump
    09/29/2020
    10/12/2020
    10/22/2020
    Reported
    Cloture invoked
    13
    23
    27
    Barrett of
    10/13/2020
    Favorably (12-0)m
    10/25/2020 (51-48)
    Indiana
    10/14/2020
    10/15/2020
    10/26/2020 Confirmed
    (52-48)
    Median number of days from date received in Senate, 1789-2020n
    14.5
    11
    10
    Median number of days from date received in Senate, 1789-1966n
    10
    9
    7
    Median number of days from date received in Senate, 1967-2020n
    27
    51
    68
    Sources:cloture invoked (55-45)l

    47

    61

    65

    04/07/2017

    Confirmed (54-45)

    Brett Kavanaugh of Maryland

    Trump

    07/10/2018

    09/04/201809/05/201809/06/201809/07/201809/27/2018

    09/28/2018

    Reported Favorably (11-9)

    Cloture invoked 10/05/2018 (51-49)

    56

    80

    88

    10/06/2018

    Confirmed (50-48)

    Amy Coney Barrett of Indiana

    Trump

    09/29/2020

    10/12/202010/13/202010/14/202010/15/2020

    10/22/2020

    Reported Favorably (12-0)m

    Cloture invoked 10/25/2020 (51-48)

    13

    23

    27

    10/26/2020

    Confirmed (52-48)

    Ketanji Brown Jackson of the District of Columbia

    Biden

    02/28/2022

    03/21/2022

    03/22/2022

    03/23/2022

    03/24/2022

    04/04/2022

    Failed to Report Favorably (11-11)n

    Cloture invoked

    04/07/2022 (53-47)

    21

    35

    38

    04/07/2022

    Confirmed (53-47)

    Median number of days from date received in Senate, 1789-2020o

    15

    11

    11

    Median number of days from date received in Senate, 1789-1966o

    10

    9

    7

    Median number of days from date received in Senate, 1967-2020o

    26

    51

    66

    Sources:
    U.S. Congress, Senate, U.S. Congress, Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America (hereinafter, (hereinafter, Senate Executive Journal), various editions from ), various editions from
    the the 1st1st Congress through the Congress through the 110th110th Congress; Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Congress; Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Legislative and Executive Calendar, various editions from the , various editions from the 77th77th Congress through the Congress through the
    103rd103rd Congress; various newspaper accounts accessed on-line through ProQuest Historical Newspapers (the primary source for recorded vote tallies in committee prior Congress; various newspaper accounts accessed on-line through ProQuest Historical Newspapers (the primary source for recorded vote tallies in committee prior
    to the 1980s); CRS Report RL31171, to the 1980s); CRS Report RL31171, Supreme Court Nominations Not Confirmed, 1789 – August 5, 2010, by Henry B. Hogue (out of print; available to congressional clients , by Henry B. Hogue (out of print; available to congressional clients
    from the author upon request); and from the author upon request); and “Nominations”"Nominations" database in the Legislative Information System, available at http://www.congress.gov/nomis/ database in the Legislative Information System, available at http://www.congress.gov/nomis/.
    . Acknowledgments: Extensive research for the above table in earlier versions of this report was performed by former CRS Extensive research for the above table in earlier versions of this report was performed by former CRS specialist,Specialist D. Steven Rutkus, former CRS D. Steven Rutkus, former CRS
    analystsAnalysts Mitchel A. Mitchel A. Sol enbergerSollenberger and Susan Navarro Smelcer, former CRS and Susan Navarro Smelcer, former CRS information research specialistInformation Research Specialist Maureen Bearden, and former CRS Maureen Bearden, and former CRS research assistantResearch Assistant Raymond Raymond
    T. Wil iams.
    a. In the 20th and 21stT. Williams. a. In the 20th and 21st centuries, the date on which the President formally made a nomination, by signing a nomination message, usually has been the same as the date centuries, the date on which the President formally made a nomination, by signing a nomination message, usually has been the same as the date
    on which the nomination was received in the Senate. These two dates are the same for any given nomination when only one date is shown in the above tableon which the nomination was received in the Senate. These two dates are the same for any given nomination when only one date is shown in the above table’s
    's "Date received in SenateDate received in Senate" column. However, for a nomination made by a President on a date prior to the nomination column. However, for a nomination made by a President on a date prior to the nomination's receipt by the Senate (a common s receipt by the Senate (a common
    occurrence in much of the occurrence in much of the 19th19th century), the earlier presidential nomination date ( century), the earlier presidential nomination date ("Nom. dateNom. date") is distinguished, in parentheses, from the later date when the ) is distinguished, in parentheses, from the later date when the
    nomination was received by the Senate.nomination was received by the Senate.
    b. b. For nominations prior to 1873 that were referred to committee, the For nominations prior to 1873 that were referred to committee, the "Final vote dateFinal vote date" is the date recorded in the is the date recorded in the Senate Executive Journal on which the committee on which the committee’s
    's chairman or other member reported the nomination to the Senate. For nominations from 1873 to 2005, the chairman or other member reported the nomination to the Senate. For nominations from 1873 to 2005, the "Final vote dateFinal vote date" is the date on which the Judiciary is the date on which the Judiciary
    CRS-45


    Committee voted to report a nomination or, in one instance (on February 14 1881, involving the first Stanley Matthews nomination), voted to postpone taking Committee voted to report a nomination or, in one instance (on February 14 1881, involving the first Stanley Matthews nomination), voted to postpone taking
    action.action.
    c. “ c. "Final action,Final action," for purposes of this table, covers the for purposes of this table, covers the fol owingfollowing mutually exclusive outcomes: confirmation by the Senate ( mutually exclusive outcomes: confirmation by the Senate (“Confirmed”"Confirmed"), withdrawal of a nomination ), withdrawal of a nomination
    by the President (by the President (“Withdrawn”"Withdrawn") and Senate rejection by a vote disapproving a nomination () and Senate rejection by a vote disapproving a nomination (“Rejected”"Rejected"). In other instances, when none of the preceding three ). In other instances, when none of the preceding three
    outcomes occurred, the last procedural action taken by the Senate on a nomination is indicated. On certain nominations, as indicated in the table, the last outcomes occurred, the last procedural action taken by the Senate on a nomination is indicated. On certain nominations, as indicated in the table, the last
    procedural outcome entailed tabling a nomination (procedural outcome entailed tabling a nomination (“Tabled”"Tabled"), postponing consideration (), postponing consideration (“Postponed”"Postponed"), or rejecting a motion to proceed to consideration (), or rejecting a motion to proceed to consideration ("Motion Motion
    to proceed rejectedto proceed rejected"). Final Senate actions taken by ). Final Senate actions taken by rol -roll call votes are shown in parentheses. Final Senate actions without call votes are shown in parentheses. Final Senate actions without rol -roll call votes shown in parentheses were call votes shown in parentheses were
    reached by voice vote or unanimous consent. For reached by voice vote or unanimous consent. For rol -roll call votes shown above, the number of Yea votes always comes before the number of Nay votes. Thus, under call votes shown above, the number of Yea votes always comes before the number of Nay votes. Thus, under
    “Confirmed” or “"Confirmed" or "Rejected,Rejected," the first number in the vote tally is the number of Senators who voted in favor of confirmation, and the second the number voting the first number in the vote tally is the number of Senators who voted in favor of confirmation, and the second the number voting
    against confirmation.against confirmation.
    d. d. On December 16 and 17, 1873, the Judiciary Committee held closed-door sessions to examine documents and hear testimony from witnesses relevant to a On December 16 and 17, 1873, the Judiciary Committee held closed-door sessions to examine documents and hear testimony from witnesses relevant to a
    controversy that arose over the controversy that arose over the Wil iamsWilliams nomination only after the committee had reported the nomination to the Senate. The controversy prompted the Senate nomination only after the committee had reported the nomination to the Senate. The controversy prompted the Senate
    to recommit the nomination to the Judiciary Committee and to authorize the committee to recommit the nomination to the Judiciary Committee and to authorize the committee "to send for persons and papers.to send for persons and papers." Senate Executive Journal, vol. 19, p. 211. , vol. 19, p. 211.
    After holding the two closed-door sessions, the committee did not re-report the nomination to the Senate. Amid press reports of significant opposition to the After holding the two closed-door sessions, the committee did not re-report the nomination to the Senate. Amid press reports of significant opposition to the
    nomination in both the Judiciary Committee and the Senate as a whole, the nomination, at nomination in both the Judiciary Committee and the Senate as a whole, the nomination, at Wil iams’Williams's request, was withdrawn by President Ulysses S. Grant on s request, was withdrawn by President Ulysses S. Grant on
    January 8, 1874. The December 16 and 17 sessions can be regarded as an early, perhaps the earliest, example of a Judiciary Committee closed-door hearing. January 8, 1874. The December 16 and 17 sessions can be regarded as an early, perhaps the earliest, example of a Judiciary Committee closed-door hearing.
    However, the above table, which focuses in part on the times that elapsed between dates nominations were received in the Senate and dates of However, the above table, which focuses in part on the times that elapsed between dates nominations were received in the Senate and dates of public confirmation confirmation
    hearings, does not count the time that elapsed from the date the hearings, does not count the time that elapsed from the date the Wil iamsWilliams nominations was received in the Senate until the December 16 and 17, 1873, sessions, nominations was received in the Senate until the December 16 and 17, 1873, sessions,
    because they were closed to the public.because they were closed to the public.
    e. e. The 60-4 The 60-4 rol roll call vote to confirm Taft, conducted by the Senate in closed-door executive session, was not recorded in the call vote to confirm Taft, conducted by the Senate in closed-door executive session, was not recorded in the Senate Executive Journal. Newspaper . Newspaper
    accounts, however, reported that a accounts, however, reported that a rol roll call vote on the nomination was demanded in the executive session, and that the vote was 60-4 to confirm, with an call vote on the nomination was demanded in the executive session, and that the vote was 60-4 to confirm, with an
    agreement reached afterwards not to make the agreement reached afterwards not to make the rol roll call public. See Robert J. Bender, call public. See Robert J. Bender, "Ex-President Taft New Chief Justice of United States,Ex-President Taft New Chief Justice of United States," Atlanta Constitution, July , July
    1, 1921, p. 1; Charles S. Groves, 1, 1921, p. 1; Charles S. Groves, "Taft Is Confirmed, as Chief Justice,Taft Is Confirmed, as Chief Justice," Boston Daily Globe, July 1, 1921, p. 1; and , July 1, 1921, p. 1; and "Proceedings of Congress and Committees in Brief,Proceedings of Congress and Committees in Brief,"
    Washington Post, July 1, 1921, p. 6., July 1, 1921, p. 6.
    f. f.
    The January 12, 1925, hearing, held in closed session, heard the testimony of former Sen. The January 12, 1925, hearing, held in closed session, heard the testimony of former Sen. Wil ardWillard Saulsbury of Delaware. Saulsbury of Delaware. "Nomination of Stone Is Held Up Once Nomination of Stone Is Held Up Once
    More,More," New York Times, January 13, 1925, p. 4. At the January 28, 1925, hearing, which was held in open session, the nominee was questioned by the Judiciary January 13, 1925, p. 4. At the January 28, 1925, hearing, which was held in open session, the nominee was questioned by the Judiciary
    Committee for four hours. This was the first confirmation hearing for a Supreme Court nomination at which the nominee appeared in person to testify. See Albert Committee for four hours. This was the first confirmation hearing for a Supreme Court nomination at which the nominee appeared in person to testify. See Albert
    W. Fox, W. Fox, "Stone Tells Senate Committee He Assumes Stone Tells Senate Committee He Assumes Ful Full Responsibility for Pressing New Wheeler Case,Responsibility for Pressing New Wheeler Case," Washington Post, January 29, 1925, p. 1., January 29, 1925, p. 1.
    g. g. The Judiciary Committee held two days of confirmation hearings on the Harlan nomination, on February 24 and 25, 1955. The February 24 session, held in The Judiciary Committee held two days of confirmation hearings on the Harlan nomination, on February 24 and 25, 1955. The February 24 session, held in closed
    session, heard the testimony of nine witnesses (seven in favor of confirmation, and two opposed). Luther A. Huston, session, heard the testimony of nine witnesses (seven in favor of confirmation, and two opposed). Luther A. Huston, "Harlan Hearing Held by Senators,Harlan Hearing Held by Senators," New York
    Times,
    February 25, 1955, p. 8. The committee also began the February 25 hearing in closed session, to hear the testimony of additional witnesses. However, for February 25, 1955, p. 8. The committee also began the February 25 hearing in closed session, to hear the testimony of additional witnesses. However, for
    Judge Harlan, who was the last scheduled witness, the committee Judge Harlan, who was the last scheduled witness, the committee "voted to open the hearing to newspaper reporters for his testimony.voted to open the hearing to newspaper reporters for his testimony." Luther A. Huston, Luther A. Huston, "Harlan Harlan
    Disavows Disavows 'One WorldOne World' Aims in Senate Inquiry, Aims in Senate Inquiry," New York Times, February 26, 1955, p. 1. February 26, 1955, p. 1.
    h. h. The 45 votes in favor of the motion to close debate fell far short of the super-majority required under Senate rules—then two-thirds of Senators present and The 45 votes in favor of the motion to close debate fell far short of the super-majority required under Senate rules—then two-thirds of Senators present and
    voting. The cloture motion, if approved, would have closed a lengthy debate (which had consumed more than 25 hours over a four-day period) on a motion to voting. The cloture motion, if approved, would have closed a lengthy debate (which had consumed more than 25 hours over a four-day period) on a motion to
    proceed to consider the Fortas nomination.proceed to consider the Fortas nomination.
    i. i.
    The 52 votes in favor of the motion to close debate fell short of the super-majority required under Senate rules—then two-thirds of Senators present and voting. The 52 votes in favor of the motion to close debate fell short of the super-majority required under Senate rules—then two-thirds of Senators present and voting.
    Although the cloture motion failed, the Senate later that day (December 10, 1971) agreed, without a procedural vote, to close debate and then voted to confirm Although the cloture motion failed, the Senate later that day (December 10, 1971) agreed, without a procedural vote, to close debate and then voted to confirm
    Rehnquist 68-26.Rehnquist 68-26.
    CRS-46

    link to page 24
    j. j.
    The 68 votes in favor of the motion to close debate, by invoking cloture, exceeded the super-majority then required under Senate rules—namely, three-fifths of the The 68 votes in favor of the motion to close debate, by invoking cloture, exceeded the super-majority then required under Senate rules—namely, three-fifths of the
    Senate’s ful Senate's full membership.membership.
    k. k. Motions to gain approval in Senate committees require a majority vote in favor and thus fail if there is a tie vote.Motions to gain approval in Senate committees require a majority vote in favor and thus fail if there is a tie vote.
    l. l.
    On April 6, 2017, a first vote on the motion to close debate on the Gorsuch nomination fell short of the super-majority required under Senate rules—then three-On April 6, 2017, a first vote on the motion to close debate on the Gorsuch nomination fell short of the super-majority required under Senate rules—then three-
    fifths of the Senatefifths of the Senate’s ful 's full membership. Immediately thereafter, however, the Senate voted to reinterpret its cloture rule to allow cloture to be invoked on Supreme membership. Immediately thereafter, however, the Senate voted to reinterpret its cloture rule to allow cloture to be invoked on Supreme
    Court nominations by a simple majority of Senators voting (a quorum being present). The Senate then, pursuant to the rule reinterpretation, voted a second time Court nominations by a simple majority of Senators voting (a quorum being present). The Senate then, pursuant to the rule reinterpretation, voted a second time
    on the motion to close debate on the nomination, exceeding the simple majority required. on the motion to close debate on the nomination, exceeding the simple majority required. Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 163 (April 6, 2017), pp. S2388-, daily edition, vol. 163 (April 6, 2017), pp. S2388-
    S2390. For a brief report explaining the SenateS2390. For a brief report explaining the Senate's April 6, 2017, actions, see CRS Report R44819, s April 6, 2017, actions, see CRS Report R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court
    Nominations: In Brief
    , by Valerie Heitshusen., by Valerie Heitshusen.
    m. m. The Senate Judiciary Committee vote on the Barrett nomination was boycotted by the 10 Democratic Senators on the committee, resulting in the absence of The Senate Judiciary Committee vote on the Barrett nomination was boycotted by the 10 Democratic Senators on the committee, resulting in the absence of
    recorded “nay”recorded "nay" committee votes in opposition to the nomination. committee votes in opposition to the nomination.
    n. n. Under temporary procedures that applied when the Senate was evenly divided between the two political parties in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), the Senate discharged the Judiciary Committee from consideration of the nomination on April 4, 2022, by a vote of 53-47. This placed the nomination on the Executive Calendar in the same status as if it had been reported. For more information on the temporary procedures used during the 117th Congress, see CRS Report R46769, The Senate Powersharing Agreement of the 117th Congress (S.Res. 27), by Elizabeth Rybicki. o. If a particular action did not occur for a nomination (e.g., a committee hearing was not held on a nomination), the nomination is not included in the calculation of If a particular action did not occur for a nomination (e.g., a committee hearing was not held on a nomination), the nomination is not included in the calculation of
    the median number of days from the date a nomination was received in the Senate to the occurrence of that particular action (e.g., the median number of days from the median number of days from the date a nomination was received in the Senate to the occurrence of that particular action (e.g., the median number of days from
    a nomination being submitted to the Senate to the start of public committee hearings). Consequently, the median values reported fora nomination being submitted to the Senate to the start of public committee hearings). Consequently, the median values reported for Table 1 include only those include only those
    nominations for which a particular action occurred after being submitted to the Senate (i.e., any nominations that did not receive a committee hearing are not nominations for which a particular action occurred after being submitted to the Senate (i.e., any nominations that did not receive a committee hearing are not
    included in the calculation of the median number of days from the nomination being submitted to the Senate to the first public hearing date).included in the calculation of the median number of days from the nomination being submitted to the Senate to the first public hearing date).

    CRS-47

    Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2020

    Table 2. Senate Votes on Whether to Confirm Supreme Court Nominations:
    Number Made by Voice Vote/Unanimous Consent (UC) or by Roll-Call Vote
    Years
    By voice vote or UC
    By roll-call vote (votes to
    Totals
    (all to confirm)
    reject in parentheses)
    1789-1829
    24
    4 (2)
    28
    1830-1889
    15
    21 (3)
    36
    1890-1965
    34
    16 (3)
    50
    1966-2020
    0
    24 (3)
    24
    Totals
    73
    65 (11)
    138
    Source: Sources: U.S. Congress, Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of
    America,
    various editions from the 1st Congress through the 110th Congress; also, “Nominations” database in the
    Legislative Information System, available at http://www.congress.gov/nomis/.


    Author Information

    Barry J. McMillion

    Analyst in American National Government



    Disclaimer
    This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
    shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and
    under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
    than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
    connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not
    subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in
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    material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to
    copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.

    Congressional Research Service
    RL33225 · VERSION 35 · UPDATED
    48
    Table 2. Number of Supreme Court Nominations Confirmed by Voice Vote/Unanimous Consent (UC) or by Roll Call Vote

    Years

    Voice Vote or UC

    Roll Call Vote

    Total Confirmed

    1789-1829

    24

    2

    26

    1830-1889

    15

    18

    33

    1890-1965

    34

    13

    47

    1966-2022

    0

    22

    22

    Totals

    73

    55

    128

    Note: Not included in Table 2 are nominations to the Court that were rejected by roll call vote. There were two, three, three, and three such nominations during the 1789-1829, 1830-1889, 1890-1965, and 1966-2022 periods, respectively.

    Sources: U.S. Congress, Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, various editions from the 1st Congress through the 110th Congress; also, "Nominations" database in the Legislative Information System, available at http://www.congress.gov/nomis/.

    Footnotes

    1.

    From President George Washington's initial six appointments to the Supreme Court in 1789 and 1790 to the appointment of Ketanji Brown Jackson in 2022, a vacancy on the Court occurred on average every two years (with a median length of time between vacancies of 1.4 years). During the post-World War II period (1946 to the present), a vacancy on the Court occurred on average every 2.4 years (with a median of 1.9 years). As of January 12, 2026, a vacancy last occurred on the Court 3.5 years ago.

    2.

    For more information on the temporary procedures used during the 117th Congress, see CRS Report R46769, The Senate Powersharing Agreement of the 117th Congress (S.Res. 27), by Elizabeth Rybicki.

    3.

    Preceding the table is summary text, which highlights certain nominations statistics derived from the table. The text also provides historical background information on the Supreme Court appointment process and uses nominations statistics from the table to shed light on ways in which the appointment process has evolved over time. Many of the statistical findings discussed, for example, provide historical perspective on the emergence, and then increased involvement, of the Senate Judiciary Committee in the appointment process.

    4. Typically, the date on which the President formally makes a nomination, by signing a nomination message, is the same as the date on which the nomination is received in the Senate. In Table 1, these two dates are the same for any given nomination when only one date is shown in the "Date received in Senate" column. However, for a nomination made by a President on a date prior to the nomination's receipt by the Senate, the earlier presidential nomination date is distinguished, in parentheses, from the date when the nomination was received by the Senate. 5. Table 1 identifies eight Supreme Court nominees who subsequent to Senate confirmation did not assume the office to which they had been appointed: Seven declined the office, and one died before assuming it. One of the seven who declined the office, William Cushing—confirmed to be Chief Justice in 1796—was at the time serving on the Court as an Associate Justice, and continued to serve in that capacity until 1810. Another of the seven, John Jay—confirmed to be Chief Justice in 1800—had served earlier on the Court, as the Court's first Chief Justice, from 1789 to 1795. 6.

    Additionally, the Supreme Court provides a list of individuals who have served on the Court as either a Chief Justice or Associate Justice. The list is available at http://www.supremecourt.gov/about/members_text.aspx.

    7.

    Specifically, eight persons were nominated twice to the same Court position (seven to be Associate Justice, one to be Chief Justice); one person was nominated three times to be Associate Justice; and nine persons were nominated first to be Associate Justice and later to be Chief Justice. The sum of 19 (the number of Court nominations that were not a person's first nomination to the Court) and 146 (the number of persons nominated to the Court at least once) is 165 (total Supreme Court nominations).

    8.

    The nation's first Chief Justice, John Jay, was nominated to that position twice. Jay was first nominated, and confirmed, in September 1789. He resigned as Chief Justice in 1795 to serve as governor of New York. In December 1800, Jay was nominated and confirmed a second time as Chief Justice, but declined the appointment. For analysis of the process by which a Chief Justice is appointed, accompanied by a list of all Chief Justice nominations from 1789 to the present (including the nomination, confirmation, judicial oath, and end-of-service dates of Chief Justice nominees, as well as their ages at time of appointment and upon termination of service), see archived CRS Report RL32821, The Chief Justice of the United States: Responsibilities of the Office and Process for Appointment, by Denis Steven Rutkus and Lorraine H. Tong.

    9.

    The three Presidents not to have made any Supreme Court nominations were William Henry Harrison, Zachary Taylor, and Jimmy Carter, with no vacancies on the Court having occurred while they were in office. While it may be unremarkable that no vacancies occurred during the relatively short presidencies of Harrison (March 4 to April 4, 1841) and Taylor (March 5, 1849, to July 9, 1850), Jimmy Carter's presidency (January 20, 1977, to January 20, 1981) is notable in that it is the only full-term presidency during which no Supreme Court vacancies occurred.

    10.

    See Myron Jacobstein and Roy M. Mersky, The Rejected (Toucan Valley Publications, 1993), pp. 69-74. (Hereinafter cited as Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected.)

    11.

    President Washington, early in his first term of office, was presented with the opportunity to make six Supreme Court nominations, as the Judiciary Act of 1789 (1 Stat. 73 (1789)) set the number of Justice positions on the newly established Court at six. On September 24, 1789, the President nominated six persons to the Court, and two days later the Senate voted for their confirmation. However, one of the confirmed nominees, Robert Harrison of Maryland, declined the appointment, resulting in President Washington, in 1790, making a seventh nomination, of James Iredell of North Carolina, whose confirmation by the Senate put the six-member Court at full strength. Subsequently during the Washington presidency, four vacancies occurred on the Court, which resulted in the President making seven more nominations. Four of these seven nominations were confirmed by the Senate, with the nominees accepting their appointments to the Court. The other three nominations involved the first of two nominations of William Paterson of New Jersey in 1793 (who, after his first nomination was withdrawn, was renominated by President Washington and confirmed), John Rutledge of South Carolina (whose nomination in 1795 to be Chief Justice was rejected by the Senate), and William Cushing of Massachusetts (whose nomination in 1796 to be Chief Justice was confirmed by the Senate, but who declined the appointment).

    12.

    The six Presidents whose single Supreme Court nominations received Senate confirmation were Franklin Pierce, James A. Garfield, William McKinley, Calvin Coolidge, Gerald R. Ford, and Joe Biden. As mentioned above, the one President whose single Supreme Court nomination did not receive confirmation was Andrew Johnson.

    13.

    A President may announce the selection of a nominee well before transmitting a nomination message to the Senate. For instance, President George W. Bush announced his selection of Samuel Alito to be a Supreme Court nominee on October 31, 2005, but formally signed and transmitted the nomination of Alito to the Senate on November 10, 2005. For a complete list, from 1900 to 2009, of the dates on which Presidents announced their Supreme Court nominees (as distinguished from when they signed and transmitted nomination documents to the Senate), see archived CRS Report RL33118, Speed of Presidential and Senate Actions on Supreme Court Nominations, 1900-2010, by R. Sam Garrett and Denis Steven Rutkus.

    14.

    See U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, History of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, 1816-1981. Sen. Doc. No. 97-18, 97th Cong., 1st sess. (GPO, 1982), p. iv; also, U.S. Senate, History of the Committee on Rules and Administration—United States Senate, prepared by Floyd M. Riddick, Parliamentarian Emeritus of the Senate, 96th Cong., 1st sess., S. Doc. No. 96-27 (GPO, 1980). Riddick provides, on pp. 21-28, the full text of the general revision of the Senate rules, adopted in 1868, including, on p. 26, the following rule: "When nominations shall be made by the President of the United States to the Senate, they shall, unless otherwise ordered by the Senate, be referred to appropriate committees...."

    15.

    The nominations from 1868 to the present not referred to the Judiciary Committee were those of Edwin Stanton in 1869 (at time of nomination, former Secretary of War); Edward White in 1894 (Senator); Edward White again, in 1910, this time to be Chief Justice (Associate Justice at time of nomination, and former Senator); William Howard Taft in 1921 (former President); George Sutherland in 1922 (former Senator); and James Byrnes in 1941 (Senator).

    16.

    For a historical overview of public hearings on Supreme Court nominations submitted to the Senate, see CRS Insight IN10476, Senate Judiciary Committee Hearings for Supreme Court Nominations: Historical Overview and Data, by Barry J. McMillion (out of print; available to congressional clients from the author upon request).

    17.

    At least once in the 19th century, the Judiciary Committee did hear witnesses testify concerning a Supreme Court nomination—that of George Williams to be Chief Justice—but these two days of hearings, on December 16 and 17, 1873, were held in closed session. The closed-door sessions were held to examine documents and hear testimony from witnesses relevant to a controversy that arose over the Williams nomination only after the committee had reported the nomination to the Senate. The controversy prompted the Senate to recommit the nomination to the Judiciary Committee and to authorize the committee "to send for persons and papers." U.S. Congress, Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America, vol. 19 (GPO, 1901), p. 189. After holding the two closed-door sessions on December 16 and 17, the committee did not re-report the nomination to the Senate. Amid press reports of significant opposition to the nomination both in the Judiciary Committee and the Senate as a whole, the nomination, at Williams's request, was withdrawn by President Ulysses S. Grant on January 8, 1874. See Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected, pp. 82-87.

    18.

    For a discussion of the advent of Supreme Court nominee appearances before the Senate Judiciary Committee, starting with Harlan Stone in 1925 (and carrying through the nominations of Abe Fortas and Homer Thornberry in 1968), see, James A. Thorpe, "The Appearance of Supreme Court Nominees Before the Senate Judiciary Committee," Journal of Public Law, vol. 18, 1969, pp. 371-402.

    19.

    A scholar examining the procedures followed by the committee in its consideration of 15 Supreme Court nominations referred to it between 1923 and 1946 found that, with two exceptions—the nominations of Charles Evans Hughes in 1930 and Harold Burton to be Associate Justices in 1945—all of the nominations were first "processed by a subcommittee prior to consideration by the full committee membership." David Gregg Farrelly, "Operational Aspects of the Senate Judiciary Committee," (Ph.D. diss., Princeton University: 1949), pp. 184-185. (Hereinafter cited as Farrelly, "Operational Aspects.")

    20.

    The four other nominations not receiving public confirmation hearings even though referred to the Judiciary Committee were of former New York governor and former Supreme Court Associate Justice Charles Evans Hughes in 1930, former federal prosecutor Owen Roberts in 1930, Senator Hugo Black in 1937, and Senator Harold Burton in 1945.

    Farrelly, in "Operational Aspects," also lists the Supreme Court nomination of former Michigan governor Frank Murphy in 1940 as one not receiving a confirmation hearing. Farrelly notes, at pp. 191-192, that the Senate Judiciary subcommittee which first processed the nomination "voted against public hearings." That vote notwithstanding, the nominee voluntarily appeared before the subcommittee on January 11, 1940, in a public session at which four Senators "all questioned Mr. Murphy about his views of the Constitution and the duties of a Supreme Court Justice." "Senate Body Backs Murphy for Court," New York Times, January 12, 1940, p. 1. Based on this and other similar newspaper accounts of the subcommittee session, January 11, 1940 is listed below, in Table 1, as a public hearing date for the Murphy nomination. 21. See, in Table 1, the multiple hearing days for the nominations of Felix Frankfurter in 1939 and Robert Jackson in 1941. 22.

    For example, a Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the 1932 nomination of Benjamin Cardozo lasted only five minutes, during which one witness testified in opposition. Likewise, when the Judiciary Committee extended open invitations for witnesses to testify in opposition at the confirmation hearings for Stanley Reed in 1938, William Douglas in 1939, Harlan Stone (for Chief Justice) in 1941, Wiley Rutledge in 1943, and Fred Vinson (for Chief Justice) in 1946, no witnesses appeared to protest against Douglas or Stone, and "only one or two persons filed protests in each case against Reed, Vinson and Rutledge." Farrelly, "Operational Aspects," pp. 194-195.

    23.

    The last Supreme Court nomination on which a Senate Judiciary subcommittee held hearings was the 1954 nomination of Earl Warren to be Chief Justice. The subcommittee held public hearings on the nomination on February 2 and 19, 1954, after which the full committee, on February 24, 1954, voted to report the nomination favorably. All subsequent hearings on Supreme Court nominations were held by the full Judiciary Committee.

    24.

    The Judiciary Committee held two days of confirmation hearings on the second Harlan nomination, on February 24 and 25, 1955. The February 24 session, held in closed session, heard the testimony of nine witnesses (seven in favor of confirmation, and two opposed). Luther A. Huston, "Harlan Hearing Held by Senators," New York Times, February 25, 1955, p. 8. The committee also began the February 25 hearing in closed session, to hear the testimony of additional witnesses. However, for Judge Harlan, who was the last scheduled witness, the committee "voted to open the hearing to newspaper reporters for his testimony." Luther A. Huston, "Harlan Disavows 'One World' Aims in Senate Inquiry," New York Times, February 26, 1955, p. 1.

    25.

    See CRS Report R44773, The Scalia Vacancy in Historical Context: Frequently Asked Questions, by Barry J. McMillion. See also letter by majority members of the Senate Judiciary Committee to the Senate majority leader expressing unanimous agreement that there be no hearings on any Supreme Court nominee until after the next President was sworn in on January 20, 2017, at https://www.grassley.senate.gov/news/news-releases/judiciary-committee-republicans-mcconnell-no-hearings-supreme-court-nomination; also, Dave Boyer, "Grassley Reiterates No Hearing Stance in Garland Meeting," The Washington Times, April 13, 2016, p. A5.

    26.

    These were the nominations of Robert Bork in 1987 (12 hearing days), Clarence Thomas in 1991 (11 days), and Abe Fortas and Homer Thornberry in 1968 (11 days for their joint hearings).

    27.

    In 1969, eight days of confirmation hearings were held on the nomination of Clement Haynsworth.

    28.

    One day of hearings each was held on the nominations of Warren Burger (to be Chief Justice) in 1969 and Harry Blackmun in 1970, while two days of hearings were held on the nomination of Antonin Scalia in 1986.

    29. As noted earlier, only once prior to the establishment of the Judiciary Committee in 1816 was a Supreme Court nomination referred to committee, and that nomination was reported to the Senate as well. See, in Table 1, the nomination in 1811 of Alexander Wolcott, which was considered by a select committee and then reported to the Senate, where it was rejected by a 9-24 vote. 30.

    The six favorably reported nominations which failed to receive Senate confirmation involved these nominees: George Williams, for Chief Justice, in 1873 (nomination withdrawn); Caleb Cushing, in 1874 (nomination withdrawn); Pierce Butler in 1922 (no action taken by Senate); Abe Fortas, for Chief Justice, in 1968 (nomination withdrawn); Clement Haynsworth Jr. in 1969 (rejected by Senate); and G. Harrold Carswell in 1970 (rejected by Senate). Butler, it should be noted, was renominated and confirmed.

    31.

    A report that states it is not accompanied by a recommendation can be a way to alert the Senate that a substantial number of committee members have some reservations about the nominee which, however, do not rise, at that point, to the level of opposition; it might also be a way to bridge or downplay differences between committee members who favor confirmation and other members who oppose it. The latter, for example, was said to be the purpose for the Judiciary Committee in 1888 reporting the Chief Justice nomination of Melville Fuller without recommendation; the action was described in a news account as a "compromise between the Democratic minority who desired a report to the Senate in favor of confirmation, and the Republican majority, who desired to defeat the nomination.... " "Mr. Fuller's Nomination," Washington Post, July 3, 1888, p. 1.

    32.

    The three nominees confirmed by the Senate after the Judiciary Committee explicitly reported their nominations without recommendation were: Melville Fuller, for Chief Justice, in 1888; George Shiras Jr. in 1892; and Clarence Thomas in 1991. A fourth nomination reported without recommendation, Wheeler Peckham, in 1894, was rejected by the Senate.

    33. See, in Table 1, the second nomination of Stanley Matthews in 1881 (confirmed 24-23) and the nomination of Lucius Lamar in 1888 (confirmed 32-28). 34.

    The nominations reported unfavorably and then rejected by the Senate involved these nominees: Ebenezer Hoar in 1869 (rejected 24-33); William Hornblower in 1894 (rejected 24-30); John Parker in 1930 (rejected 39-41); and Robert Bork in 1987 (rejected 42-58).

    35.

    The Senate in 1829 postponed taking action on the nomination of John Crittenden after receiving an adverse report on the nomination from the Judiciary Committee.

    36. As discussed in the text, the most recent occurrence of a nomination being referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee and not reported out of committee was in 2022 when the committee failed, in a tie vote, to favorably report the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson. Under temporary procedures that applied when the Senate was evenly divided between the two political parties in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), the Senate discharged the Judiciary Committee from consideration of the nomination on April 4, 2022, by a vote of 53-47. This action placed the Jackson nomination on the Executive Calendar in the same status as if it had been reported by the committee.

    The second-most recent occurrence of a nomination being referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee and not reported out of committee was in 2016 when President Obama nominated Judge Merrick Garland to the vacancy on the Court created by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. Judge Garland's nomination was referred to the Judiciary Committee on March 16, 2016, and remained pending before the committee until it was returned to the President on January 3, 2017.

    37.

    The final outcome for five of these six nominees, however, was determined not by the failure of their nominations to be reported out of committee, but by action, or lack of action, taken outside the committee—by the Senate, Congress as a whole, or the President. In 1853, the nomination of William Micou was referred to the Judiciary Committee and on the same day ordered discharged by the Senate, where no action was taken. In 1866, the nomination of Henry Stanbery was referred to the Judiciary Committee, but shortly afterwards, while the nomination was pending in the Senate, the Associate Justice position to which Stanbery had been nominated was eliminated by statute. In 1893, the nomination of William Hornblower was referred to the Judiciary Committee, but not reported; later that year, in a new session of Congress, Hornblower was renominated, reported unfavorably by the Judiciary Committee (in early 1894), and rejected by the Senate, 24-30. In 1968, the Judiciary Committee declined to report the nomination of Homer Thornberry to succeed Associate Justice Abe Fortas until the final outcome of the nomination of Fortas to be Chief Justice was determined. The Thornberry and Fortas nominations were both withdrawn by the President after a motion to close debate on the Fortas nomination failed to pass in the Senate. (The failure of Fortas's Chief Justice nomination eliminated the prospective Associate Justice vacancy that Thornberry had been nominated to fill.) In 2005, the nomination of Harriet Miers was withdrawn by the President before the Judiciary Committee held hearings on the nomination. By contrast, the failure to be confirmed of a sixth unreported nominee, Merrick Garland in 2016, could be seen as attributable in significant part to the Judiciary Committee not considering or acting on the Garland nomination.

    38.

    In February 1881, just before the final adjournment of the 46th Congress, the Judiciary Committee voted to postpone taking action on the Supreme Court nomination of Stanley Matthews; shortly afterwards, however, in a special session of the 47th Congress, Matthews was renominated, and, although his second nomination was reported unfavorably by the Judiciary Committee, it was confirmed by the Senate, 24-23. In November 1954, late in the 83rd Congress, the nomination of John Harlan II was referred to the Judiciary Committee, where no action was taken; in 1955, Harlan was renominated, considered and reported favorably by the Judiciary Committee, and confirmed by the Senate. In September 2005, before the scheduled start of confirmation hearings, the nomination of John Roberts to be Associate Justice was withdrawn and, on the same day of the withdrawal, Roberts was renominated for Chief Justice; the second Roberts nomination was reported favorably by the Judiciary Committee and confirmed by the Senate. Most recently, in 2022, the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson was not reported out of committee when the committee failed, in a tied vote, to favorably report the nomination. Under temporary procedures that applied when the Senate was evenly divided between the two political parties in the 117th Congress (2021-2022), the Senate discharged the Judiciary Committee from consideration of the nomination on April 4, 2022, by a vote of 53-47. This action placed the Jackson nomination on the Executive Calendar in the same status as if it had been reported by the committee.

    39.

    See CRS Report RL31980, Senate Consideration of Presidential Nominations: Committee and Floor Procedure, by Elizabeth Rybicki; also, CRS Report RL30360, Filibusters and Cloture in the Senate, by Valerie Heitshusen and Richard S. Beth.

    40.

    Ibid.

    41.

    It has only been since 1949, under Senate rules, that cloture could be moved on nominations. Prior to 1949, dating back to the Senate's first adoption of a cloture rule in 1917, cloture motions could be filed only on legislative measures. See CRS Report RL32878, Cloture Attempts on Nominations: Data and Historical Development Through November 20, 2013, by Richard S. Beth, Elizabeth Rybicki, and Michael Greene.

    42.

    Ibid.

    43.

    Ibid.

    44.

    See CRS Report R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court Nominations: In Brief, by Valerie Heitshusen. The action was similar to that taken in November 2013, when the Senate had reinterpreted the cloture rule to allow a simple majority vote to invoke cloture on all nominations except to the Supreme Court. See CRS Report R43331, Majority Cloture for Nominations: Implications and the "Nuclear" Proceedings of November 21, 2013, by Valerie Heitshusen.

    45.

    For the Senate's debate on the Fortas nomination immediately prior to the vote on the motion to close debate, see "Supreme Court of the United States," Congressional Record, vol. 114, October 1, 1968, pp. 28926-28933.

    46.

    The 45 votes in favor of cloture fell far short of the super-majority required—then two-thirds of Senators present and voting, a quorum being present.

    47.

    For the Senate's debate on the Rehnquist nomination immediately prior to the vote on the motion to close debate, see "Cloture Motion," Congressional Record, vol. 117, December 10, 1971, pp. 46110-46117.

    48.

    The Senate, on December 10, 1971, confirmed the Rehnquist nomination by a vote of 68-26, after voting 22-70 to reject a motion that a vote on the nomination be deferred until January 18, 1972. Congressional Record, vol. 117, December 10, 1971, p. 46121 (vote on motion to defer) and p. 46197 (confirmation vote).

    49.

    "Nomination of William H. Rehnquist To Be Chief Justice of the United States," Congressional Record, vol. 132, September17, 1986, pp. 23729-23739.

    50.

    "Cloture Motion," Congressional Record, January 26, 2006, daily edition, vol. 152, p. S197.

    51.

    "Nomination of Samuel A. Alito, Jr., To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States," Congressional Record, January 30, 2006, daily edition, vol. 152, pp. S260-S308.

    52.

    See Congressional Record, April 6, 2017, daily edition, vol. 163, pp. S2388-S2390.

    53.

    Ibid.

    54.

    The Senate established the new precedent, when, by a 48-52 vote, it overturned a ruling of the chair that a 2013 precedent that applied a majority vote cloture threshold to executive branch and lower court nominations did not apply to Supreme Court nominations. For a brief report explaining the Senate's April 6, 2017 actions (by which the Senate effectively extended to Supreme court nominations its November 2013 reinterpretation of Senate Rule XXII), see CRS Report R44819, Senate Proceedings Establishing Majority Cloture for Supreme Court Nominations: In Brief, by Valerie Heitshusen.

    55.

    Ibid.

    56.

    The earliest Senate rejection of a Supreme Court nomination occurred in 1795, when President George Washington's nomination of John Rutledge to be Chief Justice failed on a 10-14 vote. The latest instance was the Senate's rejection of Robert Bork in 1987, by a 42-58 vote. Between Rutledge and Bork, the following nominations were also rejected: Alexander Wolcott in 1811, John Spencer in 1844, George Woodward in 1846, Ebenezer Hoar in 1870, William Hornblower in 1894, Wheeler Peckham in 1894, John Parker in 1930, Clement Haynsworth Jr. in 1969, and G. Harrold Carswell in 1970.

    57.

    The following Supreme Court nominations were withdrawn, in the years indicated, with the Presidents who withdrew them shown in parentheses: The first nomination of William Paterson, in 1793 (George Washington); the first nomination of Reuben Walworth, in 1844 (John Tyler); the second nomination of John Spencer, in 1844 (John Tyler); the third nomination of Reuben Walworth, in 1845 (John Tyler); the second nomination of Edward King, in 1845 (John Tyler); George Williams and Caleb Cushing, both in 1874 (Ulysses S. Grant); Abe Fortas and Homer Thornberry, both in 1968 (Lyndon B. Johnson); John Roberts and Harriet Miers, both in 2005 (George W. Bush). Less than a week after his first nomination was withdrawn, Paterson was renominated by President Washington and confirmed by the Senate on the same day. On the same day that President Bush withdrew the Roberts nomination to be Associate Justice, he renominated Roberts to be Chief Justice, and the latter nomination was confirmed.

    58.

    The 15 nominations that lapsed at the end of a session of Congress, without a Senate confirmation or rejection vote or a withdrawal by the President having occurred, can be broken into the following groups according to Senate actions, or lack of Senate actions, taken: On three nominations (John Crittenden in 1829, the first nomination of Roger Taney in 1835, and George Badger in 1853), the Senate voted to postpone taking action; the Senate tabled two nominations (the first nomination of Edward King in 1844 and Edward Bradford in 1852); on one nomination, the Senate rejected a motion to proceed (Jeremiah Black in 1861, by a 25-26 vote); and on nine nominations, there was no record of any vote taken (the second nomination of Reuben Walworth in 1844, John Read in 1845, William Micou in 1853, Henry Stanbery in 1866, the first nomination of Stanley Matthews in 1881, the first nomination of William Hornblower in 1893, the first nomination of Pierce Butler in 1922, the first nomination of John Harlan II in 1954, and Merrick Garland in 2016). However, four of the 15 persons whose nominations lapsed in one session of Congress were renominated in the next congressional session and confirmed (Taney in 1835, Matthews in 1881, Butler in 1922, and Harlan in 1955).

    59.

    The six individuals who were not confirmed only to be later renominated and confirmed were, in the following years of confirmation shown in parentheses, William Paterson (1793), Roger Taney (1836), Stanley Matthews (1881), Pierce Butler (1922), John Harlan II (1955), and John Roberts (2005).

    60.

    The closest roll calls ever cast on Supreme Court nominations were the 24-23 vote in 1881 confirming Stanley Matthews, the 25-26 vote in 1861 rejecting a motion to proceed to consider the nomination of Jeremiah Black, and the 26-25 Senate vote in 1853 to postpone consideration of the nomination of George Badger.

    Since the 1960s, the closest roll calls on Supreme Court nominations were the 51-49 vote in 2018 confirming Brett Kavanaugh, the 52-48 vote in 2020 confirming Amy Coney Barrett, the 52-48 vote in 1991 confirming Clarence Thomas, the 53-47 vote in 2022 confirming Ketanji Brown Jackson, the 45-51 vote in 1970 rejecting G. Harrold Carswell, the 54-45 vote in 2017 confirming Neil Gorsuch, the 45-55 vote in 1969 rejecting Clement Haynsworth Jr., the 58-42 vote in 2006 confirming Samuel Alito, the 42-58 vote in 1987 rejecting Robert Bork, the 63-37 vote in 2010 confirming Elena Kagan, and the 65-33 vote confirming William Rehnquist to be Chief Justice in 1986. Also noteworthy was the 45-43 vote in 1968 rejecting a motion to close debate on the nomination of Abe Fortas to be Chief Justice; however, the roll call was not as close as the numbers by themselves suggested, since passage of the motion required a two-thirds vote of the Members present and voting.

    61.

    The most lopsided of these votes were the unanimous roll calls confirming Morrison Waite to be Chief Justice in 1874 (63-0), Harry Blackmun in 1970 (94-0), John Paul Stevens in 1975 (98-0), Sandra Day O'Connor in 1981 (99-0), Antonin Scalia in 1986 (98-0), and Anthony Kennedy in 1988 (97-0); and the near-unanimous votes confirming Noah Swayne in 1862 (38-1), Warren Burger in 1969 to be Chief Justice (74-3), Lewis Powell Jr. in 1971 (89-1), and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993 (96-3).

    62.

    In calculating the median elapsed time for the contemporary period, the Marshall nomination in 1967 was selected as the starting point for the following reason. The Marshall nomination, it could be argued, marked the start of an era in which the confirmation hearings of most, if not all, Supreme Court nominees were highly charged events, covered closely by the news media, with nominees interrogated rigorously and extensively (and for more than a day) about their judicial philosophy as well as their views on constitutional issues and the proper role of the Supreme Court in the U.S. government. For the Marshall nomination, the elapsed time between Senate receipt and start of confirmation hearings was 30 days.

    63. See bottom rows of Table 1 for median number of days that elapsed from the date Supreme Court nominations were received in the Senate to first hearing dates, for three different time spans. 64.

    This block of time is intended to be used by the committee members and staff for thorough study and review of background information about nominees and issues relevant to their nominations, in preparation for the hearings.

    65.

    For the other nine nominations, the elapsed time between Senate receipt of nomination and the first day of confirmation hearings was 50 days for David Souter in 1990, 64 days for Clarence Thomas in 1991, 28 days for Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993, 56 days for Stephen Breyer in 1994, 60 days for Samuel Alito in 2005-2006, 42 days for Sonia Sotomayor in 2009, 49 days for Elena Kagan in 2010, 47 days for Neil Gorsuch in 2017, and 56 days for Brett Kavanaugh in 2018.

    66.

    As already mentioned, the first such nomination, of Alexander Wolcott in 1811, was reported by a select committee; all subsequently reported nominations were reported by the Senate Judiciary Committee.

    67.

    Five days after the committee's favorable, and extremely prompt, recommendation of Cushing, President Ulysses S. Grant withdrew the nomination.

    68.

    Five nominations were voted on by the Judiciary Committee one day after their receipt by the Senate: Robert Grier in 1846; John Campbell in 1853; Morrison Waite, to be Chief Justice, in 1874; Horace Gray in 1881; and Harold Burton in 1945. Six nominations were voted on by the committee two days after Senate receipt: James Wayne in 1835; Samuel Nelson in 1845; Noah Swayne in 1862; David Davis in 1862; Stephen Field in 1963; and Oliver Wendell Holmes in 1902. Three nominations were voted on by the committee three days after Senate receipt: Horace Lurton in 1909; Willis Van Devanter in 1910; and Joseph Lamar in 1910.

    69.

    The first of Reuben Walworth's three nominations to the Court in 1844 was voted on by the Judiciary Committee 93 days after Senate receipt and committee referral. During the 20th century, the Judiciary Committee, in addition to its 1916 vote on the Brandeis nomination, voted on the following nominations more than 80 days after Senate receipt: Potter Stewart in 1959 (93 days); Robert Bork in 1987 (91 days), Abe Fortas, to be Chief Justice, in 1968 (83 days); and Clarence Thomas in 1991 (81 days).

    70.

    All of the 15 nominations on which the Judiciary Committee voted three days or less after Senate receipt were made prior to 1946, and 14 of the 15 were made prior to 1911.

    71. See bottom rows of Table 1 for median number of days that elapsed from the date Supreme Court nominations were received in the Senate to final Senate vote dates, for three different time spans. 72.

    The four Eisenhower nominations for which 44 or more days elapsed from the date received in the Senate to the date voted on by the Senate Judiciary Committee were those of: Earl Warren to be Chief Justice in 1954, 44 days; John Harlan II in 1955, 59 days; William Brennan Jr. in 1957, 49 days; and Potter Stewart in 1959, 93 days. Three of the nominees—Warren, Brennan, and Stewart—were already on the Court as recess appointees, a circumstance that served perhaps to make action on their nominations seem less urgent to the committee than if their seats on the Court had been vacant. Harlan, however, was not a recess appointee at the time of his nomination. See "The Harlan Nomination," New York Times, February 25, 1955, p. 20, discussing, according to the editorial, the "inexcusable delay" on the part of the committee in acting on the nomination and the objections to the nomination voiced by a few of the committee's members. (Ultimately, the committee voted 10-4 to report the nomination favorably.) Receiving much more expeditious committee action was President Eisenhower's fifth Supreme Court nomination, of Charles Whittaker in 1957, which was approved by the Judiciary Committee 16 days after Senate receipt.

    73.

    The days that elapsed from the date received in the Senate to the date voted on by the Senate Judiciary Committee were eight days and 25 days for the 1962 nominations of Byron White and Arthur Goldberg and 13 days for the 1965 nomination of Abe Fortas to be Associate Justice.

    74.

    Besides nominations that received official final Senate action in the form of confirmation or rejection (128 and 11, respectively), or that were withdrawn by the President (11), six others are treated in the table as also receiving final action, albeit not of a definitive official sort—with three having been postponed by the Senate, two tabled, and one (the nomination of Jeremiah S. Black in 1861) not considered after a motion to proceed was defeated by a 25-26 vote. While the six nominations remained pending in the Senate after the noted actions, the effect of the actions, it can be argued, was decisive in eliminating any prospect of confirmation, and thus constituted a final Senate action for time measurement purposes. Accordingly, for these six nominations, the number of days elapsed is measured from date of Senate receipt to the dates of effective final action just noted.

    75.

    This does not include the nomination of John Roberts for the Chief Justice position in 2005. While his nomination to be Chief Justice was confirmed 23 days after its initial receipt in the Senate, Roberts had been previously nominated on July 29, 2005, to be an Associate Justice on the Court. After the death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist on September 3, 2005, the first Roberts nomination was withdrawn and he was renominated to the vacant Chief Justice position. Hearings on his nomination to be an Associate Justice, set to begin on September 6, were cancelled, and rescheduled hearings, on the Chief Justice nomination, began on September 12. The overall time that elapsed from Roberts's Associate Justice nomination on July 29, 2005, to Senate confirmation of his Chief Justice nomination on September 29, 2005, was 62 days.

    76. Table 1 shows that 43 nominations received final Senate or presidential action in three or fewer days after having been received in the Senate. Of the 43, 36 (84%) were nominations that occurred prior to the 20th century. 77. Table 1 shows that 18 nominations received final Senate or presidential action more than 75 days after having been received in the Senate. Of the 18, 14 (78%) were nominations that occurred during the 20th or 21st centuries, with 12 (67%) made since 1967. 78. See in Table 1 the recess appointments of Thomas Johnson in 1791, John Rutledge (to be Chief Justice) in 1795, Bushrod Washington in 1798, H. Brockholst Livingston in 1806, Smith Thompson in 1823, John McKinley in 1837, Levi Woodbury in 1845, Benjamin Curtis in 1851, and David Davis in 1862. 79. See in Table 1 the recess appointments of Earl Warren (to be Chief Justice) in 1953, William Brennan Jr. in 1956, and Potter Stewart in 1958. 80.

    Specifically, Article II, Section 2, clause 3 of the U.S. Constitution empowers the President "to fill up all Vacancies that may happen during the Recess of the Senate, by granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session."

    81.

    For background on the history of recess appointments to the Supreme Court, and the policy and constitutional issues associated with those appointments, see CRS Report RL31112, Recess Appointments of Federal Judges, by Louis Fisher (out of print; available to congressional clients from the author upon request); and Henry B. Hogue, "The Law: Recess Appointments to Article III Courts," Political Science Quarterly, vol. 34, September 2004, p. 656.

    82.

    See U.S. Congress. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Expressing the Sense of the Senate That Recess Appointments to the Supreme Court of the United States Should Not Be Made Except Under Unusual Circumstances, report to accompany S.Res. 334, 86th Cong., 2nd sess., August 22, 1960, S.Rept. 1893 (GPO, 1960).

    83.

    Adopted by the Senate on August 29, 1960, by a 48-37 vote, S.Res. 334 expressed the sense of the Senate that recess appointments to the Supreme Court "should not be made, except, under unusual circumstances and for the purpose of preventing or ending a demonstrable breakdown in the administration of the Court's business." "Opposition to Recess Appointments to the Supreme Court," debate in Senate on S.Res. 334, Congressional Record, vol. 106 (August 29, 1960), pp. 18130-18145.

    84.

    "From the 110th Congress onward," a CRS report has noted, "it has become common for the Senate and House to use certain scheduling practices as a means of precluding the President from making recess appointments. The practices do this by preventing the occurrence of a Senate recess of sufficient length for the President to be able to use his recess appointment authority. As previous discussed ..., in a June 26, 2014 opinion [ Nat'l Labor Relations Bd. v. Noel Canning, 134 S. Ct. 2550 (2014)], the U.S. Supreme Court held that the President's recess appointment power may be used essentially only during a recess of 10 days or longer." CRS Report RS21308, Recess Appointments: Frequently Asked Questions, by Henry B. Hogue.