Order Code RL31989
CRS Report for Congress
.Received through the CRS Web
Supreme Court Appointment Process: Roles of
the President, Judiciary Committee, and Senate
Updated July 6, 2005
Denis Steven Rutkus
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Supreme Court Appointment Process: Roles of the
President, Judiciary Committee, and Senate
Summary
The appointment of a Supreme Court Justice is an infrequent event of major
significance in American politics. Each appointment is important because of the
enormous judicial power the Supreme Court exercises as the highest appellate court
in the federal judiciary. Appointments are infrequent, as a vacancy on the nine-
member Court may occur only once or twice, or never at all, during a particular
President’s years in office. Under the Constitution, Justices on the Supreme Court
receive lifetime appointments. Such job security in the government has been
conferred solely on judges and, by constitutional design, helps insure the Court’s
independence from the President and Congress.
The procedure for appointing a Justice is provided for by the Constitution in
only a few words. The “Appointments Clause” (Article II, Section 2, clause 2) states
that the President “shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the
Senate, shall appoint ... Judges of the supreme Court.” The process of appointing
Justices has undergone changes over two centuries, but its most basic feature — the
sharing of power between the President and Senate — has remained unchanged: To
receive lifetime appointment to the Court, a candidate must first be nominated by the
President and then confirmed by the Senate. Although not mentioned in the
Constitution, an important role is played midway in the process (after the President
selects, but before the Senate considers) by the Senate Judiciary Committee.
On rare occasions, Presidents also have made Court appointments without the
Senate’s consent, when the Senate was in recess. Such “recess appointments,”
however, were temporary, with their terms expiring at the end of the Senate’s next
session. The last recess appointments to the Court, made in the 1950s, were
controversial, because they bypassed the Senate and its “advice and consent” role.
The appointment of a Justice might or might not proceed smoothly. Since the
appointment of the first Justices in 1789, the Senate has confirmed 120 Supreme
Court nominations out of 154 received. Of the 34 unsuccessful nominations, 11
were rejected in Senate roll-call votes, while nearly all of the 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.
Over more than two centuries, a recurring theme in the Supreme Court
appointment process has been the assumed need for excellence in a nominee.
However, politics also has played an important role in Supreme Court appointments.
The political nature of the appointment process becomes especially apparent when
a President submits a nominee with controversial views, there are sharp partisan or
ideological differences between the President and the Senate, or the outcome of
important constitutional issues before the Court is seen to be at stake.
This report will be updated as events warrant. See CRS Multimedia MM70010,
The Supreme Court Appointment Process, for a video presentation using both
historical pictures and motion picture footage from more recent nominations.

Contents
Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
President’s Selection of a Nominee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
The Role of Senate Advice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Advice from Other Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Criteria for Selecting a Nominee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Background Investigations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Speed with Which President Selects Nominees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Recess Appointments to the Court . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Consideration by the Senate Judiciary Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Historical Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Pre-Hearing Stage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Hearings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Reporting the Nomination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Senate Debate and Confirmation Vote . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Bringing the Nomination to the Floor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Criteria Used to Evaluate Nominees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Filibusters and Motions to Close Debate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Voice Votes, Roll Calls, and Vote Margins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Reconsideration of the Nomination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Nominations That Failed to Be Confirmed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Calling Upon the Judiciary Committee to Further Examine
the Nomination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
After Senate Confirmation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Additional Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
List of Tables
Table 1. Current Members of the Supreme Court of the United States . . . . . . . . 3
Table 2. Supreme Court Nominations Not Confirmed by the Senate . . . . . . . . . 42

Supreme Court Appointment Process:
Roles of the President,
Judiciary Committee, and Senate
Background
The appointment of a Supreme Court Justice is an infrequent event of major
significance in American politics. Each appointment to the nine-member Court is
significant because of the enormous judicial power that the Court exercises, separate
from, and independent of, the executive and legislative branches. The appointments
are infrequent, as a vacancy may occur only once or twice, or even never at all,
during a particular President’s years in office.1 Underscoring this infrequency are the
number of years that have passed since the most recent appointee to the Court, Justice
Stephen G. Breyer, took his judicial oath of office on August 3, 1994.2
Under the Constitution, Justices on the Supreme Court receive lifetime
appointments, holding office “during good Behaviour.”3 Such job security in the
federal government is conferred solely on judges and, by constitutional design, is
1 During President George W. Bush’s first two years and five months in office, no
vacancies have occurred on the Court. During President William J. Clinton’s eight years
in office, two Court vacancies occurred; during George H. W. Bush’s four years in office,
two vacancies; during Ronald Reagan’s eight years in office, four vacancies; during Jimmy
Carter’s four years in office, no vacancies; during Gerald R. Ford’s two and a half years in
office, one vacancy.
2 On July 1, 2005, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, in a letter to President George W. Bush,
announced that, after almost 24 years as a Justice, she was retiring from the Court, “effective
upon the nomination and confirmation” of her successor. At the time of her announcement,
the Court’s current members had served together almost 11 years — longer than any other
nine-member Court in history. Only one Court membership stayed together longer — for
11 years and 44 days, during the years 1812 to 1823. At that time, the Court consisted of
seven Justices, the number of Court positions then provided for by law. The Justices then
on the Court were John Marshall (the Chief Justice), Bushrod Washington, William
Johnson, Henry Brockholst Livingston, Thomas Todd, Gabriel Duvall, and Joseph Story.
The period in which these seven Justices served together began on Feb. 3, 1812, when
Justice Story took his judicial oath of office, and ended when Justice Livingston died on
Mar. 13, 1823.
The more typical historical pattern, however, has been for a given Court membership
to last from two to four years before being changed by a new appointment. See “Table 5-2
— Natural Courts,” in Lee Epstein et al., The Supreme Court Compendium: Data, Decisions
& Developments
, 2nd ed. (Washington: Congressional Quarterly Inc., 1996) (hereafter cited
as Epstein, Supreme Court Compendium), pp. 339-348, identifying the periods of time
during which the successive memberships of the Court remained stable.
3 U.S. Constitution, Article III, Section 1.

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intended to insure the Supreme Court’s independence from the President and
Congress.4 Once Justices are confirmed, a President has no power to remove them
from office. A Justice may be removed by Congress, but only through the difficult
and involved process of impeachment. Only one Justice has ever been impeached
(in an episode which occurred in 1804), and he remained in office after being
acquitted by the Senate.5 Many Justices serve for 20 to 30 years and sometimes are
still on the Court decades after the President who nominated them has left office.6
The procedure for appointing a Justice to the Supreme Court is provided for in
the Constitution of the United States in only a few words. The “Appointments
Clause” in the Constitution (Article II, Section 2, Clause 2) states that the President
“shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint
... Judges of the supreme Court.”7 While the process of appointing Justices has
undergone some changes over two centuries, its most essential feature — the sharing
of power between the President and the Senate — has remained unchanged: To
4 Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist Paper 78 (“The Judges as Guardians of the
Constitution”), maintained that while the judiciary was “in continual jeopardy of being
overpowered, awed, or influenced by its coordinate branches ... , nothing can contribute so
much to its firmness and independence as permanency in office.” He added that if the courts
“are to be considered as the bulwarks of a limited Constitution against legislative
encroachments, this consideration will afford a strong argument for the permanent tenure
of judicial offices, since nothing will contribute so much as this to that independent spirit
in the judges
....” (emphases added). Benjamin Fletcher Wright, ed., The Federalist by
Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay
(Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap Press of
Harvard University Press, 1966), pp. 491 (first quote) and 494 (second quote) (hereafter
cited as Wright, The Federalist).
5 In 1804 the House of Representatives voted to impeach Justice Samuel Chase. The vote
to impeach Chase, a staunch Federalist and outspoken critic of Jeffersonian Republican
policies, was strictly along party lines. In 1805, after a Senate trial, Chase was acquitted
after votes in the Senate fell short of the necessary two-thirds majority on any of the
impeachment articles approved by the House. “Chase’s impeachment and trial set a
precedent of strict construction of the impeachment clause and bolstered the judiciary’s
claim of independence from political tampering.” Elder Witt, ed., Congressional
Quarterly’s Guide to the U.S. Supreme Court
, 2nd ed. (Washington: Congressional Quarterly
Inc, 1990), p. 235. (Hereafter cited as Witt, Guide to Supreme Court.)
6 A Supreme Court booklet, published circa 1992, noted that since the formation of the
Court in 1790, there had been only 16 Chief Justices and 95 Associate Justices, “with
Justices serving for an average of 15 years.” U.S. Supreme Court of the United States, The
Supreme Court of the United States
(Washington: Published by the Supreme Court with the
cooperation of the Supreme Court Historical Society, undated), p. 8.
7 The decision of the framers of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 to have the
President and the Senate share in the appointment of the Supreme Court Justices and other
principal officers of the Government, one scholar writes, was a compromise reached
between “one group of men [who] feared the abuse of the appointing power by the executive
and favored appointments by the legislative body,” and “another group of more resolute
men, eager to establish a strong national government with a vigorous administration, [who]
favored the granting of the power of appointment to the President.” Joseph P. Harris, The
Advice and Consent of the Senate: A Study of the Confirmation of Appointments by the
United States Senate
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1953; reprint, New York:
Greenwood Press, 1968), p. 33. (Hereafter cited as Harris, Advice and Consent.)

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receive lifetime appointment to the Court, one must first be formally selected
(“nominated”) by the President and then approved (“confirmed”) by the Senate.
Although not mentioned in the Constitution, an important role is also played midway
in the process — after the President selects, but before the Senate as a whole
considers the nominee — by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Since the end of the
Civil War, almost every Supreme Court nomination received by the Senate has first
been referred to and considered by the Judiciary Committee before being acted on by
the Senate as a whole.
Table 1. Current Members of the Supreme Court
of the United States
Date of
Appointing
Date Senate
Vote to
Name
Statea
Birth
President
Confirmed
Confirm
William H.
Va.
Oct. 1, 1924
Nixonb
Dec. 10, 1971
68-26
Rehnquist,
Chief Justice
Reaganc
Sept. 17, 1986
65-33
John Paul
Ill.
Apr. 20,
Ford
Dec. 17, 1975
98-0
Stevens
1920
Sandra Day
Ariz.
Mar. 26,
Reagan
Sept. 21, 1981
99-0
O’Connord
1930
Antonin Scalia
Va.
Mar. 11,
Reagan
Sept. 17, 1986
98-0
1936
Anthony M.
Calif.
July 23, 1936
Reagan
Feb. 3, 1988
97-0
Kennedy
David H. Souter
N.H.
Sept. 17,
Bush
Oct. 2, 1990
90-9
1939
Clarence
Va.
June 23,
Bush
Oct. 15, 1991
52-48
Thomas
1948
Ruth Bader
D.C.
Mar. 15,
Clinton
Aug. 3, 1993
96-3
Ginsburg
1933
Stephen G.
Mass.
Aug. 15,
Clinton
July 29, 1994
87-9
Breyer
1938
a State of Justice’s residence at time of appointment.
b Nominated by President Richard M. Nixon on Oct. 22, 1971, to be an Associate Justice.
c Nominated by President Ronald W. Reagan on June 20, 1986, for elevation to Chief Justice.
d
On July 1, 2005, Justice O’Connor announced her decision to retire from the Court “effective upon
the nomination and confirmation” of her successor.
For the President, the appointment of a Supreme Court Justice can be a notable
measure by which history will judge his Presidency.8 For the Senate, a decision to
8 Consider, for example, President John Adams’s fateful nomination in 1801 of John
Marshall to be Chief Justice. During his more than 34 years of service as Chief Justice,
Marshall, “more than any other individual in the history of the Court, determined the
(continued...)

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confirm is a solemn matter as well, for it is the Senate alone, through its “Advice and
Consent” function, without any formal involvement of the House of Representatives,
which acts as a safeguard on the President’s judgment. Traditionally, the Senate has
tended to be less deferential to the President in his choice of Supreme Court Justices
than in his appointment of persons to high executive branch positions.9 The more
exacting standard usually applied to Supreme Court nominations reflects the special
importance of the Court, coequal to and independent of the Presidency and Congress.
Senators are also mindful that, as noted earlier, Justices — unlike persons elected to
legislative office or confirmed to executive branch positions — receive lifetime
appointments.10
The appointment of a Supreme Court Justice might or might not proceed
smoothly. Since the appointment of the first Justices in 1789, the Senate has
confirmed 120 Supreme Court nominations out of 154 received.11 Of the 34
nominations which were not confirmed, 11 were rejected outright in roll-call votes
by the Senate, while nearly all of the rest, in the face of substantial 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.12 Five of the
8 (...continued)
developing character of America’s Federal constitutional system” and “raised the Court
from its lowly, if not discredited, position to a level of equality with the executive and
legislative branches.” Henry J. Abraham, Justices and Presidents: A Political History of
Appointments to the Supreme Court
, 3rd ed. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992), p.
83. (Hereafter cited as Abraham, Justices and Presidents.) Looking back on his
appointment a quarter century before, Adams in 1826 was quoted as saying, “My gift of
John Marshall to the people of the United States was the proudest act of my life.” Charles
Warren, The Supreme Court in United States History, rev. edition, 2 vols. (Boston: Little
Brown, 1926), vol. 1, p. 178.
9 “By well-established custom, the Senate accords the President wide latitude in the
selection of the members of his Cabinet, who are regarded as his chief assistants and
advisers. It is recognized that unless he is given a free hand in the choice of his Cabinet, he
cannot be held responsible for the administration of the executive branch.” Harris, Advice
and Consent
, p. 259.
10 The Senate “is perhaps most acutely attentive to its [advise and consent] duty when it
considers a nominee to the Supreme Court. That this is so reflects not only the importance
of our Nation’s highest tribunal, but also our recognition that while Members of the
Congress and Presidents come and go . . . , the tenure of a Supreme Court Justice can span
generations.” Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan, debate in Senate on Supreme Court nomination of
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Congressional Record, vol. 139, Aug. 2, 1993, p. 18142.
11 Witt, Guide to Supreme Court, pp. 995-998. Table, entitled “Supreme Court
Nominations, 1789-1989,” lists all confirmations to the Court for the period 1789-1989,
including those of seven individuals who were confirmed but declined to serve and one who
was confirmed but died before he could take his seat. Since the time period covered by this
table, the Senate has confirmed four more Supreme Court nominees — David H. Souter in
1990, Clarence Thomas in 1991, Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993, and Stephen G. Breyer in
1994.
12 The first rejection by the Senate of a Supreme Court nominee occurred on Dec.15, 1795,
when the Senate voted 14 to 10 not to confirm President George Washington’s nomination
(continued...)

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unconfirmed nominations involved individuals who subsequently were re-nominated
and confirmed.13
From the presidency of George Washington until early in the twentieth century,
the Senate took final action on the vast majority of Supreme Court nominations
12 (...continued)
of John Rutledge of South Carolina to be Chief Justice. See Table 2 in the following pages
of this report, listing all 34 Supreme Court nominations not confirmed by the Senate. For
more complete information about Supreme Court nominations not confirmed by the Senate,
including dates of relevant activity and votes in the Senate Judiciary Committee and the full
Senate, see CRS Report RL31171, Supreme Court Nominations Not Confirmed, 1789-2001,
by Henry B. Hogue. For short narratives regarding the Rutledge confirmation defeat and
25 subsequent Supreme Court nominees who failed to gain Senate confirmation, see J.
Myron Jacobstein and Roy M. Mersky, The Rejected (Milpitas, California: Toucan Valley
Publications, 1993), 188 p. (Hereafter cited as Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected.)
13 The first Supreme Court nominee to be re-nominated and confirmed after his first
nomination failed to be confirmed was William Paterson of New Jersey in 1793. Paterson
was first nominated on Feb. 27, 1793, by President George Washington. The President,
however, withdrew the nomination a day later, citing a constitutional technicality. In his
withdrawal message (U.S. Congress, Senate, Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the
Senate of the United States of America
, vol. 1, p. 135), President Washington indicated that
the nomination was in violation of Article I, Section 6 of the Constitution, which provides:
“No Senator or Representative shall, during the Time for which he was elected, be appointed
to any civil Office ..., which shall have been created ... during such time ....” Paterson had
been a member of the Senate when the Judiciary Act of 1789 was passed, creating the
Associate Justice position to which Washington nominated Paterson in February 1793.
Though Paterson had resigned from the Senate in 1790, the Senate term to which he had
been elected would not conclude until March 3, 1793. Washington re-nominated Paterson
on March 4, 1793, and later that day a special session of the Senate of a new Congress
confirmed the nominee by voice vote.
Another Court nominee to be re-nominated and then confirmed was Pierce Butler of
Minnesota, in 1922. Butler was first nominated by President Warren G. Harding on Nov.
23, 1922, during the 3rd session of the 67th Congress. Although reported favorably by the
Judiciary Committee, the nomination failed to be confirmed before the end of the 3rd session.
President Harding re-nominated Butler on Dec. 5, 1922, during the 4th session of the 67th
Congress, and shortly thereafter, on Dec. 22, 1922, the Senate confirmed Butler by a 61-8
roll-call vote.
A third Court nominee to be re-nominated and then confirmed was John M. Harlan II
of New York. Harlan was first nominated by President Dwight D. Eisenhower on Nov. 9,
1954, but the nomination received no action in the Senate before the the final adjournment
of the 83rd Congress less than a month later. President Eisenhower re-nominated Harlan on
Jan. 10, 1955, at the beginning of the 84th Congress, and shortly thereafter, on Mar. 16,
1955, the Senate confirmed Harlan by a 71-11 roll call vote.
Two other nominees who were not confirmed the first time only to be later re-
nominated and confirmed received Senate confirmation in spite of significant Senate
opposition. One was Roger B. Taney, nominated twice by President Andrew Jackson in
1835, and Stanley Matthews, nominated first by President Rutherford B. Hayes in 1881 and
by President James A. Garfield, later in 1881. Taney’s first nomination, to Associate
Justice, was postponed indefinitely by the Senate. During the next Congress, he was re-
nominated and confirmed as Chief Justice by a 29-15 roll-call vote in the Senate. Mathews’
first nomination was never reported out of committee, but in the following Congress, under
a new President, he was re-nominated and confirmed by a 24-23 roll-call vote.

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within one week of receiving them. In recent decades, by contrast, the Senate has
tended to proceed much more slowly. From 1967 through 1994 (the year of the most
recent Supreme Court appointment), 12 out of 19 Court nominations received by the
Senate were pending in the Senate for more than nine weeks before receiving final
action. The contemporary Senate inclination to proceed more slowly with Supreme
Court nominations has been due at least in part to several developments:
! Starting with the “Warren Court” in the 1950s (under then-Chief
Justice Earl Warren), the Supreme Court became an ongoing focal
point of controversy, as it handed down a succession of rulings
ushering in profound changes in American society and politics. By
the late 1960s, the perceived potency of the Court as a catalyst for
change underscored to many Senators, especially those on the
Judiciary Committee, the importance of closely evaluating the
attitudes and values of persons nominated to serve on the Court.
! A general trend among Senate committees in the 1970s and 1980s
was to intensify their scrutiny of presidential nominations and to
augment their investigative staffs for this purpose. Thorough and
unhurried examination was regarded as especially justified in the
case of Supreme Court nominations. Accordingly, close scrutiny by
the Senate Judiciary Committee became the norm, even if a nominee
were highly distinguished and untouched by controversy.
! Many, if not most, of the nominees in recent decades proved to be
controversial because of questions raised concerning their
backgrounds, qualifications, or ideological orientation.
! It has become increasingly common for Presidents to state the
philosophical or ideological values that they look for in a Supreme
Court nominee — a practice which may immediately raise concerns
about the nominee on the part of Senators who do not share the
President’s philosophical preferences or vision for the Court.
! Many Court appointments in recent decades were made during times
of “divided government,” when one political party controlled the
White House and the other was in the majority in the Senate.
! The frequency of 5-4 decisions by the Court has underscored to
Senators how important even just one new appointment might be for
future Court rulings.
President’s Selection of a Nominee
The need for a Supreme Court nominee arises when a vacancy occurs on the
Court, due to the death, retirement, or resignation of a Justice (or when a Justice

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announces the intention to retire or resign).14 It then becomes the President’s
constitutional responsibility to select a successor to the vacating Justice.15
The Role of Senate Advice
Constitutional scholars have differed as to how much importance the framers
of the Constitution attached to the word “advice” in the phrase “advice and consent.”
The framers, some have maintained, contemplated the Senate performing an
advisory, or recommending, role to the President prior to his selection of a nominee,
in addition to a confirming role afterwards.16 Others, by contrast, have insisted that
the Senate’s “advice and consent” role was meant to be strictly that of determining,
after the President’s selection had been made, whether to approve the President’s
choice.17 Bridging these opposing schools of thought, another scholar recently
asserted that the “more sensible reading of the term ‘advice’ is that it means that the
Senate is constitutionally entitled to give advice to a president on whom as well as
what kinds of persons he should nominate to certain posts, but this advice is not
binding.”18 Historically, the degree to which Senate advice has been sought or used
has varied, depending on the President.
It is a common, though not universal, practice for Presidents, as a matter of
courtesy, to consult with Senate party leaders as well as with members of the Senate
14 As noted above, a Supreme Court vacancy also would occur if a Justice were removed
by Congress through the impeachment process, but no Justice has ever been removed from
the Court in this way. For a comprehensive review of how and why past Supreme Court
Justices have left the Court, see Artemus Ward, Deciding To Leave: The Politics of
Retirement from the United States Supreme Court
(Albany, NY: State University of New
York Press, 2003), pp. 25-223. Ward, in introduction at p. 7, explains that his book, among
other things, examines the extent to which Justices, in their retirement decisions, have been
“motivated by strategic, partisan, personal, and institutional concerns.”
15 For a book-length examination of how Presidents since World War II have selected
nominees to serve on the Supreme Court, see David Alistair Yalof, Pursuit of Justices:
Presidential Politics and the Selection of Supreme Court Nominees
(Chicago: University
of Chicago Press, 1999), 296 p. (Hereafter cited as Yalof, Pursuit of Justices.)
16 See, for example, John Ferling, “The Senate and Federal Judges: The Intent of the
Founding Fathers,” Capitol Studies, vol. 2, Winter 1974, p. 66: “Since the convention acted
at a time when nearly every state constitution, and the Articles of Confederation, permitted
a legislative voice in the selection of judges, it is inconceivable that the delegates could have
intended something less than full Senate participation in the appointment process.”
17 See, for example, Harris, Advice and Consent, p. 34: “The debates in the Convention
do not support the thesis since advanced that the framers of the Constitution intended that
the President should secure the advice — that is, the recommendations — of the Senate or
of individual members, before making a nomination.”
18 Michael J. Gerhardt, The Federal Appointments Process (Durham, NC: Duke University
Press, 2000), p. 33. The Constitution, Gerhardt adds, “does not mandate any formal
prenomination role for the Senate to consult with the president; nor does it impose any
obligation on the president to consult with the Senate prior to nominating people to
confirmable posts. The Constitution does, however, make it clear that the president or his
nominees may have to pay a price if he ignores the Senate’s advice.” Ibid.

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Judiciary Committee before choosing a nominee.19 Senators who candidly inform a
President of their objections to a prospective nominee may help in identifying
shortcomings in that candidate or the possibility of a confirmation battle in the
Senate, which the President might want to avoid. Conversely, input from the Senate
might draw new Supreme Court candidates to the President’s attention, or provide
additional reasons to nominate a person who already is on the President’s list of
prospective nominees.20
As a rule, Presidents are also careful to consult with a candidate’s home-state
Senators, especially if they are of the same political party as the President. The need
for such care is due to the longstanding custom of “senatorial courtesy,” whereby
Senators, in the interests of collegiality, are inclined, though not bound, to support
a Senate colleague who opposes a presidential nominee from that Member’s state.
While usually invoked by home-state Senators to block lower federal court nominees
whom they find unacceptable, the custom of “senatorial courtesy” has sometimes also
played a part in the defeat of Supreme Court nominations.21
Besides giving private advice to the President, Senators may also counsel a
President publicly. A Senator, for example, may use a Senate floor statement or
issue a statement to the news media indicating support for, or opposition to, a
potential Court nominee, for the purpose of attracting the President’s attention and
influencing the President’s choice.22
19 “To a certain extent, presidents have always looked to the Senate for recommendations
and subsequently relied on a nominee’s backers there to help move the nomination through
the Senate.” George L. Watson and John A. Stookey, Shaping America: The Politics of
Supreme Court Appointments
(New York, HarperCollins College Publishers, 1995), p. 78..
(Hereafter cited as Watson and Stookey, Shaping America.)
20 President William Clinton’s search for a successor to retiring Justice Harry A. Blackmun,
during the spring of 1994, is illustrative of a President seeking and receiving Senate advice.
According to one report, the President, as he came close to a decision after holding his
options “close to the vest” for more than a month, “began for the first time to consult with
leading senators about his top candidates for the Court seat and solicited advice about
prospects for easy confirmation.” The advice he received included “sharp Republican
opposition to one of his leading choices, Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt.” Gwen Ifill,
“Clinton Again Puts Off Decision on Nominee for Court,” The New York Times, May 11,
1994, p. A16.
21 “Numerous instances of the application of senatorial courtesy are on record, with the
practice at least partially accounting for rejection of several nominations to the Supreme
Court.” Henry J. Abraham, Justices, Presidents and Senators: A History of the U.S. Supreme
Court Appointments from Washington to Clinton
, new and rev. ed. (New York: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, 1999), pp. 19-20. (Hereafter cited as Abraham, Justices, Presidents
and Senators
.) Senatorial courtesy, Abraham writes, appeared to have been the sole factor
in President Grover Cleveland’s unsuccessful nominations of William B. Hornblower (1893)
and Wheeler H. Peckham (1894), both of New York. Each was rejected by the Senate after
Senator David B. Hill (D-NY) invoked senatorial courtesy.
22 In 1987, for instance, some Senators publicly warned President Ronald Reagan that he
could expect problems in the Senate if he nominated U.S. appellate court judge Robert H.
Bork to replace vacating Justice Lewis F. Powell. Among them, Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-
(continued...)

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Advice from Other Sources
Advice, it should be noted, may come to Presidents not only from the Senate but
from many other sources. One key source of influence may be high-level advisers
within the President’s Administration.23 Others who may provide advice include
House Members, party leaders, interest groups, news media commentators, and,
periodically, Justices already on the Court.24 Presidents are free to consult with, and
receive advice from, whomever they choose.
Criteria for Selecting a Nominee
While the precise criteria used in selecting a Supreme Court nominee vary from
President to President, two general motivations appear to underlie the choices of
almost every President. One is the desire to have the nomination serve the
President’s political interests (in the partisan and electoral senses of the word
“political,” as well as in the public policy sense); the second is to demonstrate that
a search was successfully made for a nominee having the highest professional
qualifications.
Virtually every President is presumed to take into account a wide range of
political considerations when faced with the responsibility of filling a Supreme Court
vacancy. For instance, most Presidents, it is assumed, will be inclined to select a
nominee whose political or ideological views appear compatible with their own.
“Presidents are, for the most part, results-oriented. This means that they want
22 (...continued)
WV, said the Reagan Administration would be “inviting problems” by nominating Bork.
The chair of the Senate Judiciary, Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-DE), said that, while Bork was a
“brilliant man,” it did “not mean that there should be six or seven or eight or even five
Borks” on the Court. Helen Dewar and Howard Kurtz, “Byrd Threatens Stall on Court
Confirmation,” The Washington Post, June 30, 1987, p. A7. In what was regarded as a
thinly veiled reference to a possible Bork nomination, Senate Majority Whip Alan
Cranston, D-CA, called on Senate Democrats to form a “solid phalanx” to block an
“ideological court coup” by President Reagan. Al Kamen and Ruth Marcus, “Nomination
to Test Senate Role in Shaping of Supreme Court,” The Washington Post, July 1, 1987, p.
A9. In spite of these warning signs, President Reagan nominated Judge Bork, only to have
the nomination meet widespread Senate opposition and ultimate Senate rejection.
23 Modern Presidents, one scholar writes, “are often forced to arbitrate among factions
within their own administrations, each pursuing its own interests and agendas.” In recent
Administrations, he maintains, the final choice of a nominee “has usually reflected one
advisor’s hard-won victory over his rivals, without necessarily accounting for the president’s
other political interests.” Yalof, Pursuit of Justices, p. 3.
24 For numerous examples of Justices advising Presidents regarding Supreme Court
appointments, both in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, see Abraham, Justices,
Presidents and Senators,
pp. 21-23; see also in Abraham’s earlier work, Justices and
Presidents
, pp. 186-187 (Chief Justice William Howard Taft’s influence over President
Warren G. Harding); pp. 233-234 (Justice Felix Frankfurter’s advice to President Franklin
D. Roosevelt); pp. 243 (former Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes’ and former Justice
Owen J. Roberts’s advice to President Harry S. Truman); pp. 305-306 (Chief Justice Warren
Burger’s advice to President Richard M.Nixon).

CRS-10
Justices on the Court who will vote to decide cases consistent with the president’s
policy preferences.”25 The President also may consider whether a prospective
nomination will be pleasing to the constituencies upon whom he especially relies for
political support or whose support he would like to attract. For political or other
reasons, such nominee attributes as party affiliation, geographic origin, ethnicity,
religion, and gender may also be of particular importance to the President.26 A
President also might take into account whether the existing “balance” among the
Court’s members (in a political party, ideological, demographic, or other sense)
should be altered. Another consideration will be the prospects for a potential
nominee receiving Senate confirmation. Even if a controversial nominee is believed
to be confirmable, an assessment must be made as to whether the benefits of
confirmation will be worth the costs of the political battle to be waged.27
Most Presidents also want their Supreme Court nominees to have
unquestionably outstanding legal qualifications. Presidents look for a high degree
of merit in their nominees not only in recognition of the demanding nature of the
work that awaits someone appointed to the Court,28 but also because of the public’s
expectations that a Supreme Court nominee be highly qualified.29 With such
25 Hereafter cited as Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, pp. 58-59.
26 Considerations of geographic representation, for example, influenced President George
Washington in 1789, to divide his first six appointments to the Court between three
nominees from the North and three from the South. See Watson and Stookey, Shaping
America,
p. 60, and Abraham, Justices, Presidents, and Senators, pp. 59-60. President
Ronald Reagan in 1981, for example, was sensitive to the absence of any female Justices on
the Court. In announcing his choice of Sandra Day O’Connor to replace vacating Justice
Potter Stewart, President Reagan noted that “during my campaign for the Presidency, I made
a commitment that one of my first appointments to the Supreme Court vacancy would be the
most qualified woman that I could possibly find.” U.S. President (Reagan), “Remarks
Announcing the Intention To Nominate Sandra Day O’Connor To Be an Associate Justice
of the Supreme Court of the United States, July 7, 1981,” Public Papers of the Presidents
of the United States, Ronald Reagan, 1981
(Washington: GPO, 1982), p. 596
27 While the “desire to appoint justices sympathetic to their own ideological and policy
views may drive most presidents in selecting judges,” the field of potentially acceptable
nominees for most presidents, according to Watson and Stookey, is narrowed down by at
least five “subsidiary motivations” — (1) rewarding personal or political support, (2)
representing certain interests, (3) cultivating political support, (4) ensuring a safe nominee,
and 5) picking the most qualified nominee. Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, p. 59.
28 Commenting on the nature of the Court’s work, and the degree of qualification required
of those who serve on the Court, the American Bar Association, in a recently published
booklet, said the following: “The significance, range and complexity of the issues
considered by the Supreme Court, the importance of the underlying societal problems, the
need to mediate between tradition and change and the Supreme Court’s extraordinarily
heavy docket are among the factors which require a person of exceptional ability.”
American Bar Association, The ABA Standing Committee on Federal judiciary; What It Is
and How it Works
, pp. 9-10, [http://www.abanet.org/scfedjud/], visited June 18, 2003.
29 One of the “unwritten codes,” two scholars on the judiciary have written, “is that a
judicial appointment is different from run-of-the-mill patronage. Thus, although the
political rules may allow a president to reward an old ally with a seat on the bench, even
(continued...)

CRS-11
expectations of excellence, Presidents often present their nominees as the best
person, or among the best persons, available.30 Many nominees, as a result, have
distinguished themselves in the law (as lower court judges, legal scholars, or private
practitioners) or have served as Members of Congress, as federal administrators, or
as Governors.31 Although neither the Constitution nor federal law requires that a
Supreme Court Justice be a lawyer, every person nominated to the Court thus far has
been.32 A President’s search for excellence in a nominee, however, rarely proceeds
without also taking political factors into account. Rather, “more typically,” a
President “seeks the best person from among a list of those who fulfill certain of
these other [political] criteria and, of course, who share a president’s vision of the
nation and the Court.”33
Closely related to the expectation that a Supreme Court nominee have excellent
professional qualifications are the ideals of integrity and impartiality in a nominee.
Most Presidents presumably will be aware of the historical expectation, dating back
to Alexander Hamilton’s pronouncements in the Federalist Papers, that a Justice be
a person of integrity who is able to approach cases and controversies impartially,
without personal prejudice.34 In that same spirit, a bipartisan study commission on
29 (...continued)
here tradition has created an expectation that the would-be judge have some reputation for
professional competence, the more so as the judgeship in question goes from the trial court
to the appeals court to the Supreme Court level.” Robert A. Carp and Ronald A. Stidham,
Judicial Process in America, 3rd ed. (Washington: CQ Press, 1996), pp. 240-241.
30 President Gerald R. Ford, for example, said he believed his nominee, U.S. appellate court
judge John Paul Stevens “to be best qualified to serve as an Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court.” U.S. President (Ford), “Remarks Announcing Intention To Nominate
John Paul Stevens to Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, November 28, 1975,”
Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States; Gerald R. Ford; 1975, Book II
(Washington: GPO, 1977), p. 1917. Similarly, in 1991, President George H. W. Bush said
of nominee Clarence Thomas, “I believe he’ll be a great justice. He is the best person for
this position.” U.S. President (Bush, George H.W.), “The President’s News Conference in
Kennebunkport, Maine, July 1, 1991,” Public Papers of the President of the United States;
George Bush; 1991, Book II (Washington: GPO, 1992), p. 801.
31 For lists of the professional, educational, and political backgrounds of every Justice who
has served on the Court, see Epstein, Supreme Court Compendium, pp. 252-303.
32 A legal scholar notes that while the Constitution “does not preclude a president from
nominating nonlawyers to key Justice Department posts or federal judgeships,” the delegates
to the constitutional convention and the ratifiers “did occasionally express their expectation
that a president would nominate qualified people to federal judgeships and other important
governmental offices; but those comments were expressions of hope and concern about the
consequences of and the need to devise a check against a president’s failure to nominate
qualified people, particularly in the absence of any constitutionally required minimal criteria
for certain positions.” Gerhardt, Federal Appointments Process, p. 35.
33 Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, p. 64.
34 In Federalist Paper 78 (“Judges as Guardians of the Constitution”), Hamilton extolled
the “benefits of the integrity and moderation of the Judiciary,” which, he said, commanded
“the esteem and applause of all the virtuous and disinterested.” Further, he maintained,
(continued...)

CRS-12
judicial selection in 1996 declared that it was “most important” to appoint judges
who were not only learned in the law and conscientious in their work ethic but who
also possessed “what lawyers describe as ‘judicial temperament.’” This term, the
commission explained, “essentially has to do with a personality that is evenhanded,
unbiased, impartial, courteous yet firm, and dedicated to a process, not a result.”35
Accordingly, Presidents sometimes will cite the integrity or fairness of Supreme
Court nominees to buttress the case for their appointment.36
Background Investigations
An important part of the selection process involves investigating the background of
prospective nominees. In recent years the investigative effort generally has followed
two primary tracks — one concerned with the public record and professional
credentials of a person under consideration, the other with the candidate’s private
background. The private background investigation, which includes examination of
a candidate’s personal financial affairs, is conducted by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI). The investigation into a candidate’s public record and
professional abilities ordinarily is headed by high Justice Department officials, White
House aides, or both, working together.
The investigatory process may be preliminary in nature when the object is to
identify potential candidates and consider their relative merits based on information
already known or readily available. The investigations become more intensive as the
list is narrowed. The object then becomes to learn as much as possible about the
prospective nominees — to accurately gauge their qualifications and their
compatibility with the President’s specific requirements for a nominee, and,
simultaneously, to flag anything in their backgrounds that might be disqualifying or
jeopardize their chances for Senate confirmation. For help in evaluating the
backgrounds of Court candidates, Presidents sometimes also have enlisted the
assistance of private lawyers,37 legal scholars,38 or the American Bar Association
34 (...continued)
there could “be but few men” in society who would “unite the requisite integrity with the
requisite knowledge” to “qualify them for the stations of judges.” Wright, The Federalist,
pp. 495 (first quote) and 496 (second quote).
35 Improving the Process of Appointing Federal Judges: A Report of the Miller Center
Commission on the Selection of Federal Judges,
Miller Center of Public Affairs
(Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia, May 1996), p. 10.
36 For example, President George H. W. Bush, in announcing the nomination of David H.
Souter to be an Associate Justice in 1990, declared that he wanted “a Justice who will ably
and fairly interpret the law,” then added “I believe that we’ve set a good example of
selecting a fair arbiter of the law.” U.S. President (Bush, George H.W.), “Remarks
Announcing the Nomination of David H. Souter To be an Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United Sates and a Question-and-Answer Session with Reporters,” Public
Papers of the President of the United State
s; George Bush; 1990, Book II (Washington:
GPO, 1991), p. 1047.
37 Perhaps the most extensive use of private attorneys for this purpose was made by
President William J. Clinton in the spring of 1993 during his consideration of candidates to
(continued...)

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(ABA).39 Near the culmination of this investigative effort, the President may want
to personally meet with one or more of the candidates before finally deciding whom
to nominate.
During the pre-nomination phase, Presidents vary in the degree to which they
publicly reveal the names of individuals under consideration for the Court.
Sometimes, Presidents seek to keep confidential the identity of their Court
candidates. Such secrecy may allow a President to reflect on the qualifications of
prospective nominees, and the background investigations to proceed, away from the
glare of publicity, news media coverage, and outside political pressures. Other
times, the White House may, at least in the early pre-nomination stage, reveal the
names of Supreme Court candidates being considered. Such openness may be
intended to serve various purposes — among them, to test public or congressional
reaction to potential nominees, please political constituencies who would identify
with identified candidates, or demonstrate the President’s determination to conduct
a comprehensive search for the most qualified person available.
37 (...continued)
fill the Supreme Court seat of retiring Justice Byron White. President Clinton, it was
reported, utilized a team of 75 lawyers in the Washington, D.C. area, which “pore[d] over
briefs,” analyzed “mountains of opinions and speeches” and “comb[ed] through financial
records,” of the “final contenders” for the Court appointment — from whom the President
ultimately selected U.S. appellate court judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The team funneled
their analyses to the White House counsel, “who, along with other aides, advised the
president during the search for a justice.” Under the team’s ground rules, its work was
performed on a confidential basis, with contact between its lawyers and White House aides
prohibited. Private attorneys were relied on in this way at least partly because, at that early
point in the Clinton Presidency, a judicial search team for the Administration was not yet
in place in the Department of Justice. Daniel Klaidman, “Who Are Clinton’s Vetters, and
Why the Big Secret?” Legal Times, vol. 16, June 21, 1993, pp. 1, 22-23.
38 “During President Gerald R. Ford’s search to fill a high court vacancy, Attorney General
Edward Levi discreetly asked a small group of distinguished constitutional scholars to
review opinions and other legal writings of a number of candidates.” Ibid. (Klaidman), p.
23.
39 From the early 1950s through the 1990s, the ABA’s Standing Committee on Federal
Judiciary played a quasi-official evaluating role to every President regarding the
qualifications of prospective nominees to the lower federal courts (providing its evaluations
of judicial candidates to the White House via the Department of Justice). Three Presidents,
each on at least one occasion, submitted to the ABA committee the names of prospective
Supreme Court candidates as well (Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1957, Richard M. Nixon in
1971, and Gerald R. Ford in 1975). The committee, however, was unsuccessful in efforts
to secure from Presidents a permanent role in evaluating potential Supreme Court nominees.
See generally CRS Report 96-446 GOV, The American Bar Association’s Standing
Committee on Federal Judiciary: A Historical Overview
, by Denis Steven Rutkus (available
from author; hereafter cited as Rutkus, ABA Historical Overview), 61 p., for a narrative
tracing the evolution of the ABA committee’s role from the 1940s to 1995, and specifically
pp. 8-9, 31-32 and 35 regarding its role in advising Eisenhower, Nixon, and Ford,
respectively. See also Amy Goldstein, “Bush Curtails ABA Role in Selecting U.S. Judges,”
The Washington Post, March 23, 2001, pp. A1, A12, regarding the decision of President
George W. Bush to discontinue the ABA committee’s longstanding role in pre-nomination
evaluations of lower court candidates.

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Speed with Which President Selects Nominees
When a Supreme Court vacancy occurs, Presidents usually move quickly, often
selecting their nominee within a week of the vacancy being announced.40 A President
may be well positioned to make a quick announcement when a retiring Justice alerts
the President beforehand (thus giving the President lead time, before the vacancy
occurs, to consider whom to nominate as a successor). Even when receiving no
advance warning from an outgoing Justice, the President may already have in hand
a “short list,” prepared precisely for the event of a Court vacancy, of persons already
evaluated and acceptable to the President for the appointment. If the President has
a strong personal preference for a particular individual, nominating the person
quickly preempts the issue of whether someone else should be nominated. Rather
than focus on a range of individuals who should be considered for the Supreme
Court, the appointment process moves to the next stage, to the question of whether
that individual should be confirmed.
Selecting a Supreme Court nominee quickly, however, may sometimes have
drawbacks. A President may be accused of charging ahead with a nominee without
having first adequately consulted with the Senate, or without having taken the time
necessary to determine who really would make the best nominee. Also, quick
announcements might not allow time for the FBI to conduct a comprehensive
background investigation prior to nomination, leaving open the possibility of
unfavorable information about the nominee coming to light later.41
The speed with which a President chooses a nominee also can be affected by
when a seat on the Court is vacated. Sometimes, Justices might announce their
retirement when the Court concludes its annual term, in late June or early July, giving
the President little or no advance notice. In such situations, a President might decide
to nominate quickly, to allow the Senate confirmation process to begin as quickly as
possible. A swiftly made nomination, in such a circumstance, affords the Senate
40 Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, for instance, selected most of their
Supreme Court nominees quickly, within days of the vacating Justices announcing their
retirements from the Court. President William J. Clinton, however, took more time in
selecting his two Supreme Court nominees, nominating Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993 two
months after the retirement announcement of Justice Byron R. White and nominating
Stephen G. Breyer in 1994 five weeks after the retirement announcement of Harry A.
Blackmun.
41 It is “precisely when presidents fail to require thorough checks,” two scholars have
written, “that trouble is likely.” As illustrative, they cite the FBI investigation of President
Richard M. Nixon’s Supreme Court nominee Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr. in 1969.
“Unfortunately for both Haynsworth and the president, the cursory FBI check left
unrevealed questions of financial dealings and conflicts of interest that would eventually
doom the nomination. Without learning from the first mistake, the Nixon Administration
rushed headlong into another hurried selection, Harrold Carswell, without full knowledge
of flaws that would prove fatal in his background. A similar failure occurred as the Reagan
administration rushed to bring forth a nominee in the wake of the Bork defeat. In this
instance, the rushed investigation failed to uncover the marijuana episodes of Douglas
Ginsburg, which led to another presidential setback in the appointment process.” Watson
and Stookey, Shaping America, p. 82.

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Judiciary Committee and the Senate as long as three months (July through
September) in which to consider the nomination before the start of the Court’s term
in early October, thereby increasing the chances of the Court being at full nine-
member strength when it reconvenes.
The President, however, is not obligated to nominate quickly, and other
considerations might provide reasons for not doing so. For instance, from the
President’s standpoint, a nomination made in late June or early June, might, if
followed by the scheduling of confirmation hearings by the Judiciary Committee as
late as September, afford too much time in between (i.e., in July and August) for the
nominee to be exposed to potential criticism by Senate or other opponents. A desire
to minimize this exposure time for the nominee might cause a President to consider
nominating later in the summer, putting more of the onus to act expeditiously on the
Senate, if the Court is to be back at full strength when it reconvenes in October.
Sometimes, when Justices give advance notice of their intention to retire,
Presidents might be under relatively little pressure to nominate quickly. In the spring
of 1993, for example, Justice Byron R. White announced he would step down when
the Court adjourned for the summer. His advance notice gave President William J.
Clinton and the Senate together more than six months in which, respectively, to
nominate and confirm a successor before the beginning of the Court’s next term in
October.42 A year later, in the spring of 1994, Justice Harry A. Blackmun announced
his intention to retire at the end of the Court term then in progress, again affording
the President and the Senate ample time to appoint a successor to a retiring Justice
before the start of the next Court term.43
Recess Appointments to the Court
On twelve occasions in our nation’s history (most of them in the nineteenth
century), Presidents have made temporary appointments to the Supreme Court
without submitting nominations to the Senate. These occurred when Presidents
42 Days after Justice White’s retirement announcement on March 19, 1993, one
newspaper reported that, while President Clinton had “an interest in a swift nomination so
he can move on to other priorities, White’s early notice gives him weeks, even months, to
complete the selection process.” Joan Biskupic, “Promises, Pressure in Court Search,” The
Washington Post
, March 21, 1993, p. A1. The President ultimately nominated a successor
to Justice White, U.S. circuit judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg, on June 22, 1993, and the Senate
confirmed that nomination on August 3, 1993.
43 Justice Blackmun himself was reported to have told friends “he wanted to make sure
there would be ample time for a successor to be confirmed by the Senate and prepare for
the start of a new term in October.” Ruth Marcus, “Blackmun Set To Leave High Court,
The Washington Post, April 6, 1994, p. A1. Despite the long lead time afforded by Justice
Blackmun’s announcement, White House advisers reportedly believed it was “important to
act quickly” to name a successor to Blackmun, in order to “avoid a repeat of last year’s
drawn out process” in which President Clinton engaged in a “very public, three-month
search” before nominating Ruth Bader Ginsburg to the Court. Ibid., pp. A1,A7. After
Justice Blackmun’s April 5 announcement, President Clinton deliberated five weeks before
announcing, on May 13, 1994, his selection of U.S. circuit judge Stephen G. Breyer to be
his Supreme Court nominee.

CRS-16
exercised their power under the Constitution to make “recess appointments” when
the Senate was not in session.44 Historically, 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 unavailable to
confirm a President’s appointees. The terms of these “recess appointments,”
however, were limited, expiring at the end of the next session of Congress (unlike
the lifetime appointments Court appointees receive when nominated and then
confirmed by the Senate). Despite the temporary nature of these appointments, every
person appointed during a recess of the Senate, except one, ultimately received a
lifetime appointment to the Court after being nominated by the President and
confirmed by the Senate.45
The last President to make recess appointments to the Court was Dwight D.
Eisenhower. Of the five persons whom he nominated to the Court, three first
received recess appointments and served as Justices before being confirmed — Earl
Warren ( as Chief Justice) in 1953, William Brennan in 1956, and Potter Stewart in
1958. President Eisenhower’s recess appointments, however, generated controversy,
prompting the Senate in 1960, voting closely along party lines, to pass a resolution
expressing opposition to Supreme Court recess appointments in the future.46
While President Eisenhower’s were the most recent recess appointments to the
Supreme Court, recess appointments to the lower federal courts, since the late 1960s,
also have become relatively rare. While a President’s constitutional power to make
44 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, bv
granting Commissions which shall expire at the End of their next Session.”
45 See “Recess Appointments to the Supreme Court — Constitutional But Unwise?”
Stanford Law Review, vol. 10, December 1957, pp. 124-146, especially, p. 125, for table
of first 11 recess appointments to the Court, including appointment dates and later Senate
confirmation dates. The article was published prior to the twelfth recess appointment,
President Eisenhower’s recess appointment of Potter Stewart on Oct. 7, 1958.
46 Adopted by the Senate on Aug. 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.” Proponents of the resolution
contended, among other things, that judicial independence would be affected if Supreme
Court recess appointees, during the probationary period of their appointment, took positions
to please the President (in order not to have the President withdraw their nominations) or
to please the Senate (in order to gain confirmation of their nominations). It also was argued
that Senate investigation of nominations of these recess appointees was made difficult by
the oath preventing sitting Justices from testifying about matters pending before the Court.
Opponents, however, said, among other things, that the resolution was an attempt to restrict
the President’s constitutional recess appointment powers and that recess appointments were
sometimes called for in order to keep the Court at full strength and to prevent evenly split
rulings by its members. “Opposition to Recess Appointments to the Supreme Court,” debate
in Senate on S.Res. 334, Congressional Record, vol. 106, Aug. 29, 1960, pp. 18130-18145.
See also CRS Report RL31112, Recess Appointments of Federal Judges, by Louis Fisher,
pp. 16-18.

CRS-17
judicial recess appointments was upheld by a federal court in 1985,47 such
appointments, when they do occur, may cause controversy, in large part because they
bypass the Senate and its “advice and consent” role. Because of the criticisms of
judicial recess appointments in recent decades, the long passage of time since the last
Supreme Court recess appointment, and the relatively short duration of contemporary
Senate recesses (which arguably undercuts the need for recess appointments to the
Court), a President in the twenty-first century might be expected to make a recess
appointment to the Court only under the most unusual of circumstances.48
Consideration by the Senate Judiciary Committee
Historical Background
While the Constitution of the United States assigns explicit roles in the Supreme
Court appointment process only to the President and the Senate,49 the Senate
Judiciary Committee, throughout much of our nation’s history, has also played an
important, intermediary role. At first, after the creation of the Judiciary Committee
in 1816, the Senate referred nominations to the Committee by motion only. As a
result, until after the Civil War, no more than perhaps one out of three Supreme
Court nominations was sent to the Judiciary Committee for initial consideration. In
1868, however, the Senate determined that all nominations should be referred to
appropriate standing committees.50 Subsequently, up to the present day, almost all
Supreme Court nominations have been referred to the Judiciary Committee.
Through the mid-1940s, an important exception to the practice of referring
Supreme Court nominees to the Judiciary Committee usually was made for nominees
47 U.S. v. Woodley, 751 F.2d 1008 (9th Cir. 1985).
48 A notable, relatively recent instance in which the possibility of a recess appointment to
the Court was raised occurred on July 28, 1987, when Senate Minority Leader Robert Dole
(R-KS) observed that President Ronald Reagan had the constitutional prerogative to recess
appoint U.S. appellate court judge Robert H. Bork to the Court. Earlier that month Judge
Bork had been nominated to the Court, and at the time of Senator Dole’s statement, the
chair of Senate Judiciary Committee, Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Jr. (D-DE), had scheduled
confirmation hearings to begin on September 15. With various Republican Senators
accusing Senate Democrats of delaying the Bork hearings, Senator Dole offered as “food
for thought” the possibility of President Reagan recess appointing Judge Bork during
Congress’s August recess. Michael Fumento, “Reagan Has Power To Seat Bork While
Senate Stalls: Dole,” The Washington Times, July 28, 1987, p. A3; also, Edward Walsh,
“Reagan’s Power To Make Recess Appointment Is Noted,” The Washington Post, July 28,
1987, p. A8. Judge Bork, however, did not receive a recess appointment and, as a Supreme
Court nominee, was rejected by the Senate in a 58-42 vote on Oct. 23, 1987.
49 As explained earlier, Article II, Section 2, Clause 2, in pertinent part, provides simply
that the President “shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate,
shall appoint ... Judges of the supreme Court.”
50 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, History of the Committee on the
Judiciary, United States Senate, 1816-1981.
Senate Document No. 97-18, 97th Cong., 1st
sess. (Washington: GPO, 1982), p. iv.

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who, at the time of their nomination, were current or former Members of the U.S.
Senate. These nominees benefitted from “the unwritten rule of the all but automatic
approval of senatorial colleagues,”51 with the Senate moving quickly to confirm
without first referring the nominations to committee.52 The nomination of the most
recent sitting Senator to be named to the Court, Harold H. Burton (R-OH), was
unanimously confirmed in 1945, on the same day that President Harry S. Truman
transmitted it to the Senate (then controlled by a Democratic majority). The decades
since 1945 have yet to test again the Senate tradition of bypassing the Judiciary
Committee when the Supreme Court nominee is a sitting U.S. Senator — as no
President since then has nominated a sitting Senator. The last former Senator to be
nominated to the Court, also by President Truman, in 1949, was Judge Sherman
Minton of Indiana. (After defeat for re-election to the Senate in 1940, Mr. Minton
had been appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt to a federal appellate court
judgeship.) In a break with tradition, the Supreme Court nomination of ex-Senator
Minton was referred to the Judiciary Committee (which reported the nomination
favorably), followed by Senate confirmation.53
51 Abraham, Justices, Presidents, and Senators, p. 33. One notable exception to this
“unwritten rule,” Abraham observes, was Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “controversial selection”
of Sen. Hugo L. Black (D-AL) in 1937. Senator Black’s nomination was referred to the
Judiciary Committee “for full hearings, an action [i.e., confirmation hearings for a Senator
nominated to the Supreme Court] that had not then been taken since 1888.” Ibid., p. 34
(with discussion explaining various points of controversy over the Black nomination).
Subsequently the Judiciary Committee, by a 13-4 vote, reported the Black nomination
favorably, followed by a 63-16 vote of the Senate to confirm.
52 Haynes’s classic history of the Senate, published in 1938, noted what was then the
“almost unbroken tradition that the nomination of a Senator or a former member of the
Senate will be confirmed at once, without even being referred to a committee.” Haynes
cited, as illustrative, the contrasting experiences of two Supreme Court nominations in 1922
— one of an attorney in private practice, Pierce Butler, which, prior to being confirmed,
“was in controversy for nearly a month,” the other of former Sen. George Sutherland (R-
UT), which “without being referred to a committee, was confirmed by the Senate in open
session within ten minutes after the name was received.” George H. Haynes, The Senate
of the United States: Its History and Practice,
vol. 2 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company,
1938), p. 740.
53 It should be noted that not every Supreme Court nominee who was a Senator or former
Senator when nominated was confirmed. While a Member of the Senate in 1853, George
E. Badger of North Carolina was nominated to the Court but failed to gain Senate
confirmation. Without being referred to the Judiciary committee, the Badger nomination
was considered by the Senate, which ultimately voted to postpone taking any action on the
nomination. Of eight sitting U.S. Senators ever nominated to the Court, Badger was the only
one who failed to receive Senate confirmation. See Epstein et al., Supreme Court
Compendium
, pp. 265-273, listing every Supreme Court nominee’s occupational position
at time of nomination. In addition to the Badger nomination, however, the nomination in
1828 of a former U.S. Senator, John J. Crittenden of Kentucky, failed to be confirmed, after
first being referred to the Senate Judiciary Committee. After the committee reported with
the recommendation that the Senate not act on the Crittenden nomination during that
session, the Senate voted to postpone taking action on the nomination. See Jacobstein and
Mersky, The Rejected, pp. 23-23 and 57-59, for brief accounts of Crittenden and Badger
nominations, respectively; also, see CRS Report RL31171, Supreme Court Nominations Not
(continued...)

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During the nineteenth century, the Judiciary Committee routinely considered
Supreme Court nominations behind closed doors, with its deliberations during the
twentieth century gradually becoming more public in nature. According to one
expert source,54 the earliest Supreme Court confirmation hearings held in open
session were those in 1916 for the nomination of Louis D. Brandeis to be an
Associate Justice. In 1925, Harlan F. Stone became the first Supreme Court
nominee to appear in person and testify at his confirmation hearings. Neither the
Brandeis nor the Stone hearings, however, served as binding precedents. Until well
into the 1950s, the Judiciary Committee often declined to hold open confirmation
hearings or to invite Supreme Court nominees to testify.55
Hearings in 1955 on the Supreme Court nomination of John M. Harlan marked
the beginning of a practice, continuing to the present, of each Court nominee
testifying before the Judiciary Committee.56 In 1981, Supreme Court confirmation
hearings were opened to gavel-to-gavel television coverage for the first time, when
the committee instituted the practice at the confirmation hearings for nominee Sandra
Day O’Connor.57
53 (...continued)
Confirmed, 1789-2001, by Henry B. Hogue, pp. 17-20, for dates of committee and Senate
actions, if any, on Supreme Court nominations not confirmed (including the Badger and
Crittenden nominations).
54 Roy M. Mersky, Tarlton Law Library, University of Texas at Austin Law School,
telephone conversation with the author, Apr. 3, 2003. Professor Mersky and J. Myron
Jacobstein have jointly compiled 19 volumes of Senate Judiciary Committee hearings
transcripts and reports for Supreme Court nominations, starting with the Brandeis
nomination in 1916 and carrying through the most recent Court nomination of Stephen G.
Breyer in 1994. See Roy M. Mersky and J. Byron Jacobstein, comp., The Supreme Court
of the United States: Hearings and Reports on Successful and Unsuccessful Nominations
of Supreme Court Justices by the Senate Judiciary Committee, 1916-1994
, 19 vols. (Buffalo,
N.Y.: William S. Hein & Co., 1977-1996).
55 See Thorpe, James A, “The Appearance of Supreme Court Nominees Before the Senate
Judiciary Committee,” Journal of Public Law, vol. 18, 1969, pp. 371-384. (Hereafter cited
as Thorpe, Appearance of Nominees.) See also David Gregg Farrelly, “Operational
Aspects of the Senate Judiciary Committee,” (Ph.D. diss., Princeton University, 1949), pp.
184-199, in which author examines the procedures followed by the committee in its
consideration of 15 Supreme Court nominations referred to it between 1923 and 1947. The
author observes, on p. 192, that six of the 15 nominations were “confirmed without benefit
of public hearings. Of the remaining nine nominations, full public hearings were used on
two occasions, another appointee received a limited hearing, and six were given routine
hearings. Only [John J.] Parker and [Felix] Frankfurter received full, open hearings.” A
“routine hearing,” the author explained, on pp. 194-195, “differs from a full, open hearing
in that a date is set for interested parties to appear and present evidence against
confirmation. In other words, a meeting is scheduled without requests for one; an open
invitation is extended by the committee for the filing of protests against an appointment.”
In 1930, although Supreme Court nominee John J. Parker had communicated his
willingness to testify, the Judiciary Committee voted against inviting him to do so.
“Committee, 10 to 6, Rejects Parker,” The New York Times, April 22, 1930, pp. 1, 23.
56 Thorpe, Appearance of Nominees, pp. 384-402.
57 Although the standard practice of the Judiciary Committee, prior to the O’Connor
(continued...)

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Whereas, historically, nominees usually were removed from the appointment
process, they are now active participants. Indeed, at the hearings, the nominee’s
demeanor, responsiveness and knowledge of the law may be crucial in influencing
the committee members’ and other Senators’ votes on confirmation.
Another important historical trend has involved the pace and thoroughness of
the Judiciary Committee in acting on Supreme Court nominations. Throughout the
second half of the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century, it was
the standard practice, unless Senators at the outset found a nominee to be
objectionable for some reason, for the committee to act on and dispose of a
nomination within days of receiving it. In recent decades, by contrast, the committee
has tended to proceed much more deliberately, with its official involvement in the
appointment process now usually measured in weeks or months.
Since the late 1960s, the Judiciary Committee’s consideration of a Supreme
Court nominee almost always has consisted of three distinct stages — a pre-hearing
investigative stage, followed by public hearings, and concluding with a committee
decision on what recommendation to make to the full Senate.
Pre-Hearing Stage
Immediately upon the President’s announcement of a nominee, the Judiciary
Committee initiates its own intensive investigation into the nominee’s background.
One primary source of information is a committee questionnaire to which the
nominee responds in writing.58 Confidential FBI reports on the nominee are another
important information source. These are available only to committee members and
a small number of designated staff under strict security procedures designed to
prevent unauthorized disclosure. Also, independently of the FBI, committee staff
conduct their own confidential investigations into the nominee’s background.
57 (...continued)
hearings in 1981, was to prohibit broadcast coverage of Supreme Court confirmation
hearings, there was at least one notable exception to this practice during the early years of
television broadcasting. Archival records of the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS),
obtained by the Congressional Research Service (CRS), show that, on Feb. 26 and 27,
1957, the CBS television network filmed and broadcast a few minutes of the confirmation
hearings of Supreme Court nominee William J. Brennan Jr. Much earlier, in 1939, in a
deviation from its standard practice of not allowing film coverage of confirmation hearings,
the Judiciary Committee permitted newsreel coverage of its hearing on Supreme Court
nominee Felix Frankfurter. A newsreel excerpt from the Frankfurter hearing is included in
a CRS video product; see CRS Multimedia MM70010, The Supreme Court Appointment
Process,
by Steve Rutkus.
58 Treated as public information are sections of the questionnaire that request biographical
and financial disclosure information, as well as the nominee’s responses to questions about
the Constitution and the law. Treated by the committee as confidential (and not available
to the media or the public) are the nominee’s responses to more sensitive questions, such as
whether he or she ever had been under a federal, state or local investigation for possible
violation of a civil or criminal statute or had ever been sued by a client or other party.

CRS-21
Meanwhile, the nominee, in accordance with longstanding tradition, visits
Capitol Hill to pay “courtesy calls” on individual Senators in their offices. For
Senators not on the Judiciary Committee, this may be the only opportunity to
converse in person with the nominee before voting on his or her confirmation to the
Court. Senators may use these meetings to share their views with the nominee and
to indicate the issues that are important to them in the context of the nomination.
Also during the pre-hearing stage, the nominee is evaluated by the American Bar
Association’s Standing Committee on Federal Judiciary.59 Whether the ABA
committee, in evaluating the nominee, plays a quasi-official advisory role to the
Senate Judiciary Committee will, as explained below, depend on the status accorded
to it by the chair of the Senate committee.
The stated function of the ABA committee is to impartially evaluate judicial
nominees. The focus of each evaluation, according to the committee, is on the
candidate’s “integrity, professional competence and judicial temperament,”60 with
the goal being “to support and encourage the selection of the best qualified persons
for the federal judiciary.”61 At the culmination of its evaluation, the ABA committee
votes on whether to rate the nominee “well-qualified,” “qualified,” or “not
qualified.” The rating of the ABA committee is then reported to the Senate Judiciary
Committee.62 In the past, the ABA committee chair routinely has been among the
59 Traditionally, this evaluation role has been performed at the official invitation of the
chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee. In 1947, the ABA committee was first invited by
the committee’s chair, Sen. Alexander Wiley (R-WI), to testify or file a recommendation on
each judicial nomination receiving a hearing. Grossman, Joel B. Lawyers and Judges: The
ABA and the Politics of Judicial Selection
( New York: John Wiley and Sons, Inc, 1966),
p. 64. A central purpose of the Judiciary Committee, when it first invited the ABA
committee to evaluate judicial nominees, was to “help insure that only the highest caliber
[of] men and women ascended to the bench ....” Statement of Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Jr.,
chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, in: U.S. Congress. Committee on the Judiciary.
The ABA Role in the Judicial Nomination Process. Hearing on the Role of the American
Bar Association in the Judicial Evaluation Process, 101st Cong., lst Sess., June 2, 1989
(Washington: GPO, 1991), p. 2, .
60 The ABA Standing Committee on Federal Judiciary: What It Is and How It Works,
American Bar Association, p. 9, available at [http://www.abanet.org/scfedjud/].
61 Ibid., p. 2. In the ABA committee’s investigation of a Supreme Court nominee, all 15
committee members take part in confidential interviews with practicing lawyers, judges, law
professors and others “who are in a position to evaluate the prospective nominee’s integrity,
professional competence and judicial temperament.” Ibid., p. 10. Meanwhile, teams of
law school professors, as well as a separate team of practicing lawyers, examine the legal
writing of the nominee. The results of these inquiries are forwarded to the full ABA
committee.
62 Ibid., pp. 8-9. Invariably, a nominee’s ABA rating receives prominent news coverage
when it is sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee. In the past, a unanimously positive rating
by the ABA committee almost always presaged a very favorable vote by the Judiciary
Committee on the nominee as well. Conversely, a divided vote, or less than the highest
rating, by the ABA committee usually served to flag issues about the nominee for the Senate
Judiciary Committee to examine at its confirmation hearings, and these issues in turn were
(continued...)

CRS-22
first public witnesses to testify at each Supreme Court confirmation hearing, for the
purpose of explaining the ABA committee’s rating of the nominee.
For the most part, from its inception in the late 1940s, and continuing through
the next three decades, the ABA committee evaluated Supreme Court nominees, as
well as nominees to lower court judgeships, with bipartisan support in the Senate.
In the 1980s and 1990s, however, the committee came under increasing criticism
from some Senators, who questioned its impartiality and the usefulness of its
nominee evaluations to the Judiciary Committee.63 Among the critics has been
Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R-UT), former chairman of the Judiciary Committee. In
1997, then-Chairman Hatch announced that, during his chairmanship of the Judiciary
Committee, the ABA committee would no longer be accorded an “officially
sanctioned role” in the judicial confirmation process. He noted, however, that
individual Senators were, “of course, free to give the ABA’s ratings whatever weight
they choose.”64
62 (...continued)
sometimes cited by Senators on the Judiciary Committee who voted against reporting the
nomination favorably to the Senate floor.
Since the inception of the ABA committee’s evaluating role, most, but not all, Supreme
Court nominees have received the highest ABA rating, while none has been found by a
committee majority to be “not qualified.” See generally Rutkus, ABA Historical Overview.
63 The ABA committee was accused by some Senators, as well as by some conservative
interest groups, of holding a liberal ideological bias. The committee’s ratings of judicial
nominees Robert H. Bork in 1987 and Clarence Thomas in 1991 in particular were cited as
demonstrating committee prejudice against nominees with conservative judicial
philosophies. The ABA rating of Bork was unusual, with 10 of the committee’s 15 members
finding the nominee “well qualified,” four members rating him “not qualified,” and one
member voting “not opposed” — with no members voting for the intermediate “qualified”
rating. For the Thomas nomination, 12 of the committee’s 15 members found the nominee
“qualified,” two found him “unqualified,” and one abstained. The mid-level rating by the
12-member majority was in contrast to the “well qualified” ratings that the ABA panel had
unanimously given the two previous Supreme Court nominees, David H. Souter and
Anthony M. Kennedy. See CRS Report 93-290 GOV, The Supreme Court Appointment
Process: Should It Be Reformed?, by
Denis Steven Rutkus (hereafter cited as Rutkus, Should
Appointment Process Be Reformed?
; available from author), pp. 54-56; also see Rutkus,
ABA Historical Overview, pp. 44-56.
64 “One cannot assume,” Chairman Hatch wrote,”that a group as politically active as the
ABA can at the same time remain altogether neutral, impartial and apolitical when it comes
to evaluating judicial qualifications.” He added that “[p]ermitting a political interest group
to be elevated to an officially sanctioned role in the confirmation process not only debases
that process, but in my view, ultimately detracts from the moral authority of the courts
themselves.” Senator Orrin G. Hatch, letter to colleagues on the Senate Judiciary
Committee, U.S. Senate, Feb. 24, 1997; see also, Associated Press, “Hatch Hits ABA’s
Screening Role, The Washington Times, Feb. 19, 1997, p. A4.

Although the new policy announced by Senator Hatch in 1997 ended the ABA
committee’s quasi-official relationship with the Judiciary Committee, the relationship was
temporarily restored, in the 107th Congress — when the Democratic Party became the
Senate’s majority party, on June 5, 2001. With the change in party control, Sen. Patrick J.
Leahy (D-VT) assumed the chairmanship of the Judiciary Committee, holding that position
(continued...)

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Nevertheless, the ABA committee, under both Republican and Democratic
chairs, has been allowed to testify before the Judiciary Committee on all lower court
judicial nominees who received “Not Qualified” ratings from the ABA committee.
Similarly, the Judiciary Committee, in keeping with past practice, can be expected
to include the ABA chair among the public witnesses at future Supreme Court
confirmation hearings — to explain whatever rating the ABA committee gives to the
nominee.
Meanwhile, it is common, well before the start of confirmation hearings, for
public debate to begin on the nominee’s qualifications and on the meaning of the
nomination for the future of the Court. Much of this debate will be waged by
commentators in the news media and by advocacy groups that actively support or
oppose the nominee. Senators, too, sometimes contribute to this debate in Senate
floor statements or other public remarks.
As the confirmation hearings approach, Judiciary Committee members and staff
closely study the public record and investigative information compiled on the
nominee, and then prepare questions to pose at the hearings. Likewise, the nominee
also intensively prepares for the hearings, focusing particularly on questions of law
and policy likely to be raised by committee members. Usually, the nominee is
assisted in this effort by White House staff, who provide legal background materials
and help coach the nominee on what questions to expect.
Hearings
A confirmation hearing typically begins with a statement by the chair of the
Judiciary Committee welcoming the nominee and outlining how the hearing will
proceed. Other members of the committee follow with opening statements, and a
panel of “presenters” introduce the nominee to the committee.65 It is then the
nominee’s turn to make an opening statement, after which begins the principal
business of the hearing — the questioning of the nominee. Typically, the chairman
begins the questioning, followed by the ranking minority member and then the rest
of the committee in descending order of seniority, alternating between majority and
minority members, with a uniform time limit for each Senator during each round.
64 (...continued)
for the rest of the 107th Congress. Senator Leahy stated that the Judiciary Committee’s
Democratic members would oppose votes on any of President George W. Bush’s judicial
nominees who were not first reviewed by the ABA committee. Audrey Hudson, “Democrats
Want ABA To Vet Judges,” The Washington Times, March 28, 2001, p. A4; “Democrats
Say ABA’s Vetting of Nominees Still Counts,” The Washington Post, Mar. 28, 2001, p. A5.
During his chairmanship, Senator Leahy was critical of the Bush White House for declining
to include the ABA in the pre-nomination evaluation process, “even though their decision
adds to the length of time nominations must be pending before the Senate before they can
be considered.” Sen. Patrick J. Leahy, “Nomination of Morrison C. England, Jr. To Be
United States District Judge for the Eastern District of California,” Congressional
Record
, vol. 148, daily edition, Aug. 1, 2002, p. S7814.
65 The “presenters” often will include the Senators from the state in which the nominee is
a resident or from the state in which the nominee was born.

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When the first round of questioning has been completed, the committee begins a
second round, which may be followed by more rounds, at the discretion of the
committee chair.66
In recent decades, most nominees have undergone rigorous questioning in
varying subject areas. They have been queried, as a matter of course, about their
legal qualifications, private backgrounds, and earlier actions as public figures. Other
questions have focused on social and political issues, the Constitution, particular
Court rulings, current constitutional controversies, constitutional values, judicial
philosophy, and the analytical approach a nominee might use in deciding issues and
cases.67 To many Senators, eliciting testimony from the nominee may be seen as an
important way to gain insight into the nominee’s professional qualifications,
temperament, and character. Some Senators, as well, may hope to glean from the
nominee’s responses signs of how the nominee, if confirmed to the Court, might be
expected to rule on issues of particular concern to the Senators.
For his or her part, however, a nominee might sometimes be reluctant to answer
certain questions that are posed at confirmation hearings.68 A nominee might decline
to answer for fear of appearing to make commitments on issues that later could come
before the Court.69 A nominee also might be concerned that the substance of candid
66 Almost invariably, the questioning is conducted exclusively by members of the
committee. However, on at least two occasions in the twentieth century, a Senator who was
not a committee member was allowed to join in the questioning of the nominee. This first
instance, in 1941, involved Sen. Millard E. Tydings (D-MD) at the confirmation hearings
for nominee Robert H. Jackson; the second instance, in 1956, involved Sen. Joseph R.
McCarthy (R-WI) at the confirmation hearings for nominee William J. Brennan, Jr. Thorpe,
Appearance of Supreme Court Nominees, p. 378 (Jackson hearings) and p. 385 (Brennan
hearings).
67 See CRS Report 90-429 GOV, Questioning Supreme Court Nominees — A Recurring
Issue
, by Denis Steven Rutkus (available from author).
68 See Rutkus, Should Appointment Process Be Reformed?, pp. 32-37. See also William G.
Ross, “The Questioning of Supreme Court Nominees at Senate Confirmation Hearings:
Proposals For Accommodating the Needs of the Senate and Ameliorating the Fears of the
Nominees,” Tulane Law Review, vol. 62, November 1987, pp. 109-174.
69 Illustrative of such a concern was the following statement by nominee David H. Souter,
at a September 14, 1990 hearing, explaining his refusal to answer a question concerning the
issue of a woman’s right, under the Constitution, to have an abortion: “Anything which
substantially could inhibit the court’s capacity to listen truly and to listen with as open a
mind as it is humanly possible to have should be off-limits to a judge. Why this kind of
discussion would take me down a road which I think it would be unethical for me to follow
is something that perhaps I can suggest, and I will close with this question.
“Is there anyone who has not, at some point, made up his mind on some subject and
then later found reason to change or modify it? No one has failed to have that experience.
.... With that in mind can you imagine the pressure that would be on a judge who had stated
an opinion, or seemed to have given a commitment in these circumstances to the Senate of
the United States, and for all practical purposes, to the American people?” U.S. Congress,
Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Nomination of David Souter To Be Associate Justice
of the Supreme Court of the United
States, hearings, 101st Cong., 2nd sess., Sept. 13, 14, 17,
(continued...)

CRS-25
responses to certain questions could displease some Senators and thus put the
nominee’s chances for confirmation in jeopardy.
For their part, committee members may differ in their assessments of a
nominee’s stated reasons for refusing to answer certain questions.70 Some may be
sympathetic and consider a nominee’s refusal to discuss certain matters as of no
relevance to his or her fitness for appointment. Others, however, may consider the
nominee’s views on certain subjects as important to assessing the nominee’s fitness
and hence regard unresponsiveness to questions on these subjects as sufficient reason
to vote against confirmation. Protracted questioning, occurring over several days of
hearings, is likely especially if the nominee is relatively controversial or is perceived
by committee members to be evasive or insincere in responding to certain questions.
For members of the Judiciary Committee, questioning of the nominee may serve
various purposes. As already noted, for Senators who are undecided about the
nominee, the hearings may shed light on the nominee’s fitness, and hence on how
they should vote. Other Senators, as the hearings begin, may already be “reasonably
certain about voting to confirm the nominee,” yet “also remain reasonably open to
counter-evidence,” and thus use the hearings “to pursue a line of questioning
designed to probe the validity of this initial favorable predisposition.”71 Still others,
however, may come to the hearings “having already decided how they will vote on
the nomination” and, accordingly, use their questioning of the nominee to try “to
secure or defeat the nomination.”72 For some Senators, the hearings may be a vehicle
through which to impress certain values or concerns upon the nominee, in the hope
of influencing how he or she might approach issues later as a Justice.73 The hearings
69 (...continued)
18 & 19, 1990 (Washington: GPO, 1991), p. 194.
70 As early as 1959, at the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Potter
Stewart, there is record of Judiciary Committee members differing among themselves as to
appropriateness of certain areas of questioning for the nominee. During the hearings, Sen.
Thomas C. Hennings Jr. ( D-MO), raised a point of order about interrogating a nominee on
his “opinion as to any of the questions or the reasoning upon decisions which have
heretofore . . . [been] handed down” by the Supreme Court. The point of order, however,
was overruled by the committee’s chair, Sen. James O. Eastland ( D-MS), who stated the
rule he would follow: “[I]f the nominee thinks that the question is improper, that he can
decline to answer. And that when he declines, his position will be respected.” L.A. Powe
Jr., “The Senate and the Court: Questioning a Nominee,” Texas Law Review, vol. 54, May
1976, p. 892, citing unpublished transcript of April 9 and 14, 1959 hearings of the Senate
Judiciary Committee on the Supreme Court nomination of Potter Stewart, pp. 43-44.
71 Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, p. 150.
72 Ibid., p. 152.
73 See Stephen J. Wermiel, “Confirming the Constitution: The Role of the Senate Judiciary
Committee,” Law and Contemporary Problems, v. 56, Autumn 1993, p. 141, in which
author maintains that, since the 1987 hearings on Supreme Court nominee Robert H. Bork,
a purpose of Senators on the Judiciary Committee has been “to identify points of
constitutional concern and pursue those concerns with nominees, with the hope that, once
confirmed, the new Justices will remember the importance of the core values urged on them
(continued...)

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also may represent to some Senators an opportunity to draw the public’s attention to
certain issues, to advocate their policy preferences, or to associate themselves with
concern about certain problems. Senators, it has also been noted, “may play multiple
roles in any given hearings.”74
After questioning the nominee, the committee, in subsequent days of hearings,
also hears testimony from public witnesses. As stated earlier, among the first to
testify, in recent decades, has been the chair of the ABA’s Standing Committee on
Federal Judiciary, who explains the committee’s rating of the nominee. Other
witnesses ordinarily include spokesmen for advocacy groups which support or
oppose the nominee.
In a practice instituted in 1992, the Judiciary Committee also has conducted a
closed-door session with each Court nominee. This session is held to address any
questions about the nominee’s background that confidential investigations might
have brought to the committee’s attention. In announcing this procedure in 1992, the
then-chair of the committee, Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-DE), explained that such
a hearing would be conducted “in all cases, even when there are no major
investigative issues to be resolved so that the holding of such a hearing cannot be
taken to demonstrate that the committee has received adverse confidential
information about the nomination.”75 The first such hearing was held for Supreme
Court nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993. The closed-door hearing was separate
from public hearings that the committee held on Judge Ginsburg’s nomination.
Reporting the Nomination
Usually within a week of the end of hearings, the committee meets in open
session to determine what recommendation to “ report” to the full Senate. The
committee may report favorably, negatively, or make no recommendation at all. A
report with a negative recommendation or no recommendation permits the
nomination to go forward, while alerting the Senate that a substantial number of
committee members have reservations about the nominee.
If a majority of its members oppose confirmation, the committee technically
may decide not to report the nomination, to prevent the full Senate from considering
the nominee. However, dating back at least to the 1880s, the Judiciary Committee’s
practice has been to report even those Supreme Court nominations that were opposed
by a committee majority,76 thus allowing the full Senate to make the final decision
73 (...continued)
by the senators or at least feel bound by the assurance they gave during their hearings.”
74 Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, p. 155
75 Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Jr., “Reform of the Confirmation Process,” remarks in the Senate,
Congressional Record, vol. 138, June 25, 1992, p. 16320.
76 Among the more than 70 nominations which the Senate received from the Judiciary
Committee between 1881 and 1994 were those of Stanley Matthews (1881), reported
unfavorably; Lucius Q.C. Lamar (1888), reported unfavorably; William B. Hornblower
(continued...)

CRS-27
on whether the nominee should be confirmed.77 This committee tradition was
reaffirmed in June 2001 by the committee’s then-chairman, Senator Patrick J. Leahy
(D-VT), and its then-ranking minority member, Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R-UT), in
a June 29, 2001, letter to Senate colleagues. The committee’s “traditional practice,”
their letter stated,
... has been to report Supreme Court nominees to the Senate once the Committee
has completed its considerations. This has been true even in cases where
Supreme Court nominees were opposed by a majority of the Judiciary
Committee.
We both recognize and have every intention of following the practices and
precedents of the committee and the Senate when considering Supreme Court
nominees.78
Reporting to the Senate almost always includes the transmittal of a written
committee report,79 which presents the views both of committee members supporting
76 (...continued)
(1894), reported unfavorably; Wheeler H. Peckham (1894), reported without
recommendation; John J. Parker (1930), reported unfavorably; Robert H. Bork (1987),
reported unfavorably; and Clarence Thomas (1991), reported without recommendation.
77 From President James A. Garfield’s nomination of Stanley Matthews on March 14, 1881,
to the present day, every person nominated to the Supreme Court except one has received
Senate consideration and a vote on his or her nomination. The one instance when the
Senate did not consider and vote on an individual nominated to be a Supreme Court Justice
involved President Lyndon B. Johnson’s nomination of federal appellate judge Homer
Thornberry in 1968. Judge Thornberry was nominated to fill the Associate Justice vacancy
that was to be created upon Justice Fortas’s confirmation as Chief Justice. However, the
Fortas nomination failed to gain Senate confirmation when, on Oct. 4, 1968, President
Johnson withdrew both the Fortas and Thornberry nominations, after a motion to close
Senate debate on the Fortas nomination on Oct. 1, 1968, failed by a 45-43 vote (falling short
of the two-thirds majority needed to close debate).
78 Sen. Patrick J. Leahy and Sen. Orrin G. Hatch, “Dear Colleague” letter, June 29, 2001,
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 147, June 29, 2001, p. S7282.
79 One of the last Supreme Court nominations to be reported to the Senate floor without a
written report by the Judiciary Committee was the 1969 nomination of Warren E. Burger
to be Chief Justice. During Senate consideration of the nomination, the absence of a
written report from the Judiciary Committee prompted three Senators to express concerns.
The Senators maintained that it was important for the Senate, when considering an
appointment of this magnitude, to be able to consult a written report from the Judiciary
Committee that provided a breakdown of any recorded votes by the committee and an
explanation of the committee’s recommendation regarding the nominee. “The Supreme
Court of the United States,” debate in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 115, June 9,
1969, pp. 15174-75 and 15192-94. Shortly after this discussion, the Senate concluded
debate on the Burger nomination and voted to confirm the nominee, 74-3. Subsequent to
the Burger nomination in 1969, the Judiciary Committee has reported a Supreme Court
nomination to the Senate only once without a written report, doing so in December 1975
when it reported favorably the nomination of John Paul Stevens to the Court. The absence
of a written committee report was not mentioned during very brief Senate consideration of
the Stevens nomination, which ended in a 98-0 confirmation vote.

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and those opposing the nominee’s confirmation.80 The process of preparing this
written report is closed to the public. The Senate usually, but not always, has agreed
with Judiciary Committee recommendations that a Supreme Court nominee be
confirmed.81 Historically, negative committee reports, or reports without
recommendation, have been precursors to nominations encountering substantial
opposition in the full Senate, although a few of these nominations have eventually
been confirmed by narrow margins.82
Senate Debate and Confirmation Vote
Bringing the Nomination to the Floor
After the Judiciary Committee has reported a nomination, it is assigned an
Executive Calendar number by the executive clerk of the Senate. As with other
nominations listed in the Executive Calendar, information about a Supreme Court
nomination will include the name and office of the nominee, the name of the
previous holder of the office, and whether the committee reported the nomination
favorably, unfavorably, or without recommendation. Business on the Executive
Calendar, which consists of treaties and nominations, is considered in executive
session.83 Unless voted otherwise by the Senate, executive sessions are open to the
80 The written report ordinarily is produced within a week of the committee vote. On
infrequent occasions, however, the report may entail weeks of preparation if the nomination
is controversial or if the report is regarded as possibly crucial in influencing how the full
Senate will vote on the nomination. In 1970, for instance, the committee submitted its
written report on nominee Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. more than a month after voting 10-7
to recommend that Judge Haynsworth be confirmed. (Subsequently the full Senate rejected
the Haynsworth nomination by a 55-45 vote.)
81 The Senate disagreed with the Judiciary Committee’s favorable assessment of a
Supreme Court nominee three times in the twentieth century, declining to confirm Supreme
Court nominees Abe Fortas in 1968, Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. in 1969, and G. Harrold
Carswell in 1970, even though their confirmation had been recommended by the committee.
At least once in the nineteenth century, the Senate, in 1873, questioned a favorable
committee report on a nominee to the Court, recommitting the nomination of George H.
Williams to be Chief Justice; the nomination later was withdrawn by the President, without
having been reported out a second time by the committee. A year later, in 1874, the
nomination of Caleb Cushing to be Chief Justice failed to receive Senate confirmation after
being reported favorably by the Judiciary Committee. Soon after the committee’s action and
in the face of growing Senate opposition, the nomination was withdrawn by President
Ulysses S. Grant without, however, having received formal Senate consideration. See
Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected, pp. 82-87 (Williams), pp. 87-89 (Cushing), pp. 125-
137 (Fortas), pp. 141-147 (Haynsworth), and pp. 147-155 (Carswell).
82 Specifically, the following three Supreme Court nominations, though reported out of
committee without a favorable recommendation, nonetheless were confirmed by the Senate:
Stanley Matthews (1881), by a 24-23 vote; Lucius Q.C. Lamar (1888), by a 32-28 vote; and
Clarence Thomas (1991), by a 52-48 vote.
83 CRS Report RL31980, Senate Consideration of Presidential Nominations: Committee
(continued...)

CRS-29
public.84 Floor debate on a Supreme Court nomination, in contemporary practice,
invariably has been conducted in public session, open to the press and, since 1986,
to live nationwide television coverage.85
Consideration of a nomination is scheduled by the majority leader, in
consultation with the minority leader. If, as is usually the case, the Senate begins the
day in legislative session, it will, in order to consider the nomination, enter executive
session, either by a non-debatable motion or by unanimous consent.86 In recent
decades, the almost invariable practice in calling up a Supreme Court nomination has
been for the majority leader to ask for unanimous consent (UC) that the Senate
consider the nomination. The leader may ask for unanimous consent to proceed to
executive session to consider the nomination immediately,87 or at some specified
date and time in the future.88
Frequently, UC requests also include a limit on the time that will be allowed for
debate and specify the date and time on which the Senate will vote on a nomination.89
83 (...continued)
and Floor Procedure, by Elizabeth Rybicki, p. 8. (Hereafter cited as Rybicki, Senate
Consideration.
)
84 In 1925 the full Senate for the first time considered a Supreme Court nomination — that
of Harlan F. Stone to be an Associate Justice — in open session, waiving a rule requiring
the chamber to consider nominations in closed session. In 1929, the Senate amended its
rules to provide for debate on nominations in open session unless there is a vote to go into
closed session. Thenceforth, it became the regular Senate practice to conduct debate on
nominations, including those to the Supreme Court, in open session.
85 The Senate has allowed gavel-to-gavel broadcast coverage of Senate floor debate since
June 1986. The Senate’s first floor debates on Supreme Court nominations ever to be
televised were its September 1986 debates on the nominations of William H. Rehnquist to
be Chief Justice and Antonin Scalia to be an Associate Justice.
86 “It is not in order for a Senator to move to consider a nomination that is not on the
calendar, and except by unanimous consent a nomination on the calendar cannot be taken
up until it has been on the calendar at least one day.” Rybicki, Senate Consideration, p. 8.
87 For instance, under a unanimous consent agreement requested by Majority Leader
Robert C. Byrd (D-WV), on Oct. 21, 1987, the Senate proceeded immediately to consider
the Supreme Court nomination of Robert H. Bork. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, “Executive
Session,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 133, Oct. 21, 1987, p. 28654.
88 For instance, on Sept. 27, 1990, a UC agreement was obtained by Majority Leader
George J. Mitchell (D-ME) providing for the Senate to proceed to the Supreme Court
nomination of David H. Souter at 2:30 p.m., Oct. 2. Sen. George J. Mitchell, “Nomination
of David L. Souter To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States,”
remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 136, Sept. 27, 1990, p. 26387.
89 In this vein, Majority Leader George J. Mitchell (D-ME), on July 28, 1994, while the
Senate was in legislative session, asked, “as if in executive session,” unanimous consent
that at 9 a.m. on July 29, the Senate proceed to executive session to consider the Supreme
Court nomination of Stephen G. Breyer. The UC request, which was agreed to, also
specified that there be six hours of debate after which, the Senate, “without any intervening
action on the nomination.” would vote on whether to confirm. Sen. George J. Mitchell,
(continued...)

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Typically, the amount of time agreed upon for debate is divided evenly between the
majority and minority parties, who usually have as their respective floor managers
the chair and ranking minority member of the Judiciary Committee. A time limit,
if agreed to, forecloses the use of unlimited debate as a delaying tactic by opponents
of the nomination — a tactic known, in Senate procedural parlance, as the filibuster.
Conversely, if the Senate agrees by unanimous consent to consider the nomination
without a time limit, unlimited debate as a delaying tactic is possible, although not
necessarily inevitable.90
When unanimous consent to call up a nomination cannot be secured, a
procedural alternative is to make a motion that the Senate consider the nomination.
Such a motion may be made while the Senate is in executive or legislative session.
If the majority leader moves to consider the nomination during executive session, the
motion is debatable under Senate rules, “and so it can be filibustered.”91 Closing
debate on the motion requires an affirmative vote by a super-majority of three-fifths
of the entire Senate membership (60 Senators if there are no vacancies).92
The debatable nature of a motion to consider, when made in executive session,
was demonstrated in 1968, when the nomination of Associate Justice Abe Fortas to
be Chief Justice was brought to the Senate floor. The episode marked the most
recent Senate proceedings in which a motion was made to consider a Supreme Court
nomination, a motion made while the Senate was in executive session. Significant
opposition within the Senate to the Fortas nomination raised the theoretical possibility
of two filibusters being mounted — the first against the motion to consider, and then
(if Fortas supporters were successful in closing debate on the first filibuster) a
second, against the nomination itself.93 The second filibuster, however, failed to
89 (...continued)
“Unanimous-Consent Agreement,” Congressional Record, vol. 140, July 28, 1994, p.
18544. Likewise, UC requests agreed to by the Senate limited the time for debate and set
the date and time for Senate vote on the Supreme Court nominations of Ruth Bader
Ginsburg (1993), Clarence Thomas (1991), Anthony M. Kennedy (1988), and Sandra Day
O’Connor (1981).
90 For example, the Sept. 27, 1990, UC agreement (discussed in footnote 88) which
provided for the Senate to proceed to the Supreme Court nomination of David H. Souter at
2:30 p.m., Oct. 2, did not, however, also provide for a time limit on the debate. Despite the
absence of a time limit in the UC agreement, the Senate concluded debate on, and voted to
confirm, on the same day that it began debate on the Souter nomination, Oct. 2. Likewise,
the Senate on Aug. 29, 1967, by unanimous consent, proceeded to consider the Supreme
Court nomination of Thurgood Marshall, without also providing for a time limit on the
debate. “Supreme Court of the United States,” Congressional Record, vol. 113, Aug. 29,
1967, p. 24437. In the absence of a time limit on debate, the Senate concluded debate on,
and voted to confirm, the Marshall nomination the next day, Aug. 30.
91 Charles Tiefer, Congressional Practice and Procedure (New York: Greenwood Press,
1989), p. 607. (Hereafter cited as Tiefer, Congressional Practice.)
92 For full details on the cloture process, see CRS Report RL30360, Filibusters and Cloture
in the Senate,
by Richard Beth and Stanley Bach.
93 For just as the motion to consider was a debatable question, permitting a filibuster by
(continued...)

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materialize when the Senate declined, by the super-majority vote required, to close
debate on the motion to consider.94
A motion to consider a nomination, however, may also be made while the
Senate is in legislative session, and such a motion is not debatable. Since 1980, the
Senate precedent has been established that when the Senate is in legislative session,
a non-debatable motion may be made to go into executive session to take up a
specified nomination.95 The 1980 precedent has procedural significance for any
future Supreme Court nomination facing the likelihood of a filibuster in the Senate.
If adhered to, the precedent, according to one congressional scholar, means that
“there would be only one filibuster, on the nomination itself.”96
Criteria Used to Evaluate Nominees
Once the Senate begins debate on a Supreme Court nomination, many Senators
typically will take the floor. Some, in their opening remarks, will underscore the
importance of the Senate’s “advice and consent” role, and the consequent
responsibility to carefully determine the qualifications of a nominee before voting to
confirm.97 Invariably, each Senator who takes the floor will state for the record his
or her reasons for voting in favor of or against the nominee’s confirmation.
The criteria used to evaluate a Supreme Court nominee are a personal, very
individual matter for each Senator.98 In their floor remarks, some Senators may cite
a nominee’s professional qualifications or character as the key criterion,99 others may
93 (...continued)
opponents, so, too, would be the question of whether to advise and consent to the
nomination.
94 The vote on the motion to close debate on the motion to consider the Fortas nomination
was 45-43,well short of the super-majority then required by Senate rules for passage of a
“cloture motion” (two-thirds of Senators present and voting). Shortly after the unsuccessful
attempt at cloture, the Fortas nomination was withdrawn by President Lyndon B. Johnson.
95 Floyd M. Riddick and Alan S. Frumin, Riddick’s Senate Procedure, Senate Doc. 101-28,
101st Cong., 2nd Sess., Washington, GPO, 1992, pp. 941-942.
96 Tiefer, Congressional Practice, p. 608.
97 “The advice-and-consent role of the Senate,”one of its Members noted in 1994, “is
something that we do not take lightly because this is the only opportunity for the people of
this Nation to express whether or not they deem a nominee qualified to sit on the highest
court in the land.” Sen. Mark O. Hatfield, “Nomination of Stephen G. Breyer, of
Massachusetts, To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States,”
remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 140, July 29, 1994, pp. 18692-93.
98 See CRS General Distribution Memorandum, Criteria Used by Senators To Evaluate
Judicial Nominations
, by Denis Steven Rutkus, June 14, 2002, 23 p. (available from
author).
99 For example, during 1991 Senate debate on the Supreme Court nomination of Judge
Clarence Thomas, the criterion of professional qualification was cited by both supporters
and opponents of the nominee to explain their votes. A Senator supporting the Thomas
(continued...)

CRS-32
stress the importance of the nominee’s judicial philosophy or views on constitutional
issues,100 while still others may indicate that they are influenced in varying degrees
by all of these criteria.” 101
In recent decades, Senate debate on virtually every Supreme Court nomination
has focused to some extent on the nominee’s judicial philosophy, ideology,
constitutional values, or known positions on specific legal controversies. Many
highly controversial decisions of the Court in recent decades have been closely
99 (...continued)
nomination maintained that instead of the nominee’s “philosophy on particular issues”
which might come before the Supreme Court, the “more appropriate standard” was that the
nominee “have outstanding legal ability and wide experience and meet the highest standards
of integrity, judicial temperament, and professional competence.” Judge Thomas, the
Senator added, “clearly meets that standard.” Sen. Frank H. Murkowski, “Nomination of
Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol.
137, Oct. 1, 1991, p. 24748. Other Senators, however, used the criterion of professional
competence to find Judge Thomas unqualified. One, for example, found the nominee’s
“legal background and experience” inadequate and added that if a President did not
nominate to the court “well-qualified, experienced individuals, the American people have
the right to expect that the members of the Senate will reject the nomination.” Sen. Jeff
Bingaman, “Justice Clarence Thomas,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol.
137, Oct. 2, 1991, p. 24973.
100 During debate over the nomination of Clarence Thomas in 1991, these criteria were
used both by Senators favoring the nomination and by others opposing it. One Senator in
support of the nomination, for example, declared his desire to have “Supreme Court Justices
who will interpret the Constitution and not attempt to legislate or carry out personal agendas
from the bench.” Sen. Richard C. Shelby, “Nomination of Judge Clarence Thomas To Be
an Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional
Record,
vol. 137, Oct. 1, 1991, p. 24703. By contrast, another Senator, explaining his
opposition to confirming Judge Thomas, said that if Senators were “not confident that
nominees possess a clear commitment to the fundamental constitutional rights and freedoms
at the heart of our democracy, they should not be confirmed.” Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
“Nomination of Clarence Thomas, of Georgia, To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 137, Oct. 3,
1991, p. 25271.
101 “In addition to the obvious criteria any nominee for the Supreme Court ought to have
— I suppose any nominee for any position on the judiciary ought to have — those of
intellect, of integrity, and of judicial temperament, it is very appropriate of the Senate to
inquire into a nominee’s judicial philosophy. Of course, that includes the nominee’s
fidelity to the Constitution. It involves that nominee’s understanding of the limited role of
the courts, and it involves what I hope is a commitment to judicial restraint.” Charles E.
Grassley, “Supreme Court of the United States,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional
Record,
vol.139, Aug. 2, 1993, p. 18133. Similarly evincing concern with both a nominee’s
professional qualification and his constitutional values was this 1991 Senate floor statement
during debate on the nomination of Clarence Thomas: “When I face a Supreme Court
nominee I have three questions: Is he or she competent? Does she or he possess the highest
personal and professional integrity? And, third, will he or she protect and defend the core
constitutional values and guarantees around free of speech, religion, equal protection of the
law, and the right of privacy?” Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski, “Nomination of Clarence
Thomas, of Georgia, To Be An Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 137, Oct. 15, 1991, p. 26299.

CRS-33
decided, by 5-4 votes, appearing to underscore a longstanding philosophical or
ideological divide in the Court between its more “liberal” and “conservative”
members. A new appointee to the Court, Senators recognize, could have a
potentially decisive impact on the Court’s ideological “balance” and on whether past
rulings of the Court will be upheld, modified, or overturned in the future.102
Announcements by the Court of 5-4 decisions, an analysis in the press observed, have
“become routine, a familiar reminder of how much the next appointment to the court
will matter.”103
Senators sometimes will indicate in their floor statements whether they believe
the views of a particular nominee, although not in complete accord with their own
views, nonetheless, fall within a broad range of acceptable legal thinking.104
Senators’ concerns with a nominee’s judicial philosophy or ideology may become
heightened, and their positions more polarized relative to other Senators’, if a
nominee’s philosophical orientation is seen as controversial, or if the President is
perceived to have made the nomination with the specific intention of changing the
Court’s ideological balance.105
102 Three political scientists wrote recently that although “speculation about possible
Supreme Court vacancies is usually met with much interest by court watchers, it is
particularly intense at present due to the ideological balance of the current Court and the
recent politics of the judicial confirmation process. Given the delicate ideological balance
on the current Court, a single vacancy could produce a dramatic shift in the ideological
direction of future rulings.” Kenneth L. Manning, Bruce A. Carroll, and Robert A. Carp,
“George W. Bush’s Potential Supreme Court Nominees: What Impact Might They Have?”,
Judicature, vol. 85, May-June 2002, p. 278.
103 Linda Greenhouse, “Divided They Stand: The High Court and the Triumph of
Discord,” The New York Times, July 15, 2001, sec. 4, p. 1. Greenhouse noted that one-third
of the Court’s 79 full written opinions handed down during the October 2000 term had been
decided by 5-4 votes, “often but not always the same 5 and the same 4.” The next
appointment, she commented, “when it comes, could change the court’s, and hence the
nation’s, course on nearly every important constitutional question currently being debated.”
104 For example, during 1994 floor debate on the Supreme Court nomination of Stephen
G. Breyer, one Senator said of the nominee’s views: “Certainly in terms of an expansive
definition of the Constitution, I have no doubt that Judge Breyer is going to make rulings
that represent a different interpretation of the great document than I have and that people
who share my views have. But I also believe that Judge Breyer’s views are mainstream
liberal views. I believe that anyone who voted for Bill Clinton knew or should have known
that the chances than anyone more conservative than Judge Breyer being nominated by Bill
Clinton were almost zero.” Sen. Phil Gramm, “Nomination of Stephen G. Breyer, of
Massachusetts, To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States,”
remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 140, July 29, 1994, pp. 18671-72.
105 Senate concern with a nominee’s judicial philosophy was especially heightened in 1987
when President Ronald Reagan nominated appellate court judge Robert H. Bork to the
Court. The nomination sparked immediate controversy, and polarized the Senate generally
along party lines, in large part because of the nominee’s judicial philosophy of “original
intent” and the perception that he had been nominated by President Reagan to move the
Court in the future in a more conservative direction. For analysis of how central an issue
Judge Bork’s judicial philosophy was in the Senate confirmation battle, see See Massaro,
Supremely Political, pp. 159-193.
In a Senate floor statement shortly after the Bork nomination was made, the then-
(continued...)

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Other factors also may figure importantly into a Senator’s confirmation
decisions. One, it has been suggested, is peer influence in the Senate.106 Particularly
influential, for instance, might be Senate colleagues who are championing a nominee
or spearheading the opposition, or who played prominent roles in the Judiciary
Committee hearings stage. Another consideration for Senators will be the views of
their constituents, especially if many voters back home are thought to feel strongly
about a nomination.107 A third source of influence may be the views of a Senator’s
advisers, family, and friends, as well as the position taken on the nomination by
advocacy groups that the Senator ordinarily trusts or looks to for perspective.108
Just as Presidents are assumed to do when considering prospective nominees for
the Supreme Court, Senators may evaluate the suitability of a Supreme Court
nominee according to whether certain groups or constituencies are adequately
105 (...continued)
chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sen. Joseph R. Biden, Jr. (D-DE), faulted the
President for his choice. Senator Biden declared that when a President selects nominees
“with more attention to their judicial philosophy and less attention to their detachment and
statesmanship,” a Senator “has not only the right but the duty to respond by carefully
weighing the nominee’s judicial philosophy and the consequences for the country.” The
Senate, he continued, had both the right and the duty to raise political and judicial
“questions of substance,” for “we are once again confronted with a popular President’s
determined attempt to bend the Supreme Court to his political ends.” Sen. Joseph R. Biden
Jr., “Advice and Consent: The Right and Duty of the Senate To Protect the Integrity of the
Supreme Court,” remarks in the Senate,” Congressional Record, vol. 133, July 23, 1987,
p 20913 (first quote) and 20915 (second quote).
Various Senators who favored Judge Bork’s confirmation, however, disagreed with
Senator Biden regarding the importance of the nominee’s judicial philosophy. Some
expressed a preference for a narrower scope of Senate inquiry, focusing on Judge Bork’s
legal competence and character. Others considered Judge Bork’s judicial philosophy and
views of the Constitution appropriate areas of inquiry, but the crucial determination for the
Senate to make in these areas, they argued, was whether his views fell within a broad range
of acceptable thinking, not whether individual senators agreed with those views. Further,
some Senators maintained, to evaluate a nominee according to political or judicial
philosophy, or to vote to confirm only if Senators agreed with the nominee’s views, would
politicize the Supreme Court and undermine its independence of the legislative branch. See
CRS Report 87-761 GOV), Senate Consideration of the Nomination of Robert H. Bork to
Be a Supreme Court Associate Justice — Background and an Overview of Issues
, by Denis
Steven Rutkus (available from author), pp. 25-27.
106 See Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, pp. 191-195, for discussion of how a
relatively few number of Senators may serve as “cues” to other Senators during the
consideration of controversial Supreme Court nominations.
107 Illustrative of this, during 1991 Senate debate over the Clarence Thomas nomination,
Sen. Frank H. Murkowski (R-AK) stated, “I have heard from a number of Alaskans and
visited with them last week during our recess. Many have gone back and forth during the
testimony, but now the hearings are concluded, and they are telling me by a substantial
majority that they favor the confirmation of Judge Thomas by this body.” Sen. Frank H.
Murkowski, “Nomination of Clarence Thomas, of Georgia, to be An Associate Justice of
the Supreme Court of the United States,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol.
137, Oct. 15, 1991, p. 26300.
108 See Watson and Stookey, Shaping America, pp. 198-199.

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represented on the Court.109 Among the representational criteria commonly
considered have been the nominee’s party affiliation, geographic origin, ethnicity,
religion, and gender.

When considering Supreme Court nominations, Senators may also take Senate
institutional factors into account. For instance, the role, if any, that Senators from the
home state of a nominee played in the nominee’s selection, as well as their support
for or opposition to the nominee, may be of interest to other Senators. At the same
time, Senators may be interested in the extent to which the President, prior to
selecting the nominee, sought advice from other quarters in the Senate — for
instance, from Senate party leaders and from the chair, ranking minority member, and
other Senators on the Judiciary Committee. A President’s prior consultation with a
wide range of Senators concerning a nominee may be a positive factor for other
members of the Senate, by virtue of conveying presidential respect for the role of
Senate advice, as well as Senate consent, in the judicial appointments process.
Sometimes, Senators may find themselves debating whether the Senate, in its
“advice and consent” role, should defer to the President and give a nominee the
“benefit of the doubt.” This issue received particular attention during Senate
consideration of the Supreme Court nomination of Clarence Thomas in 1991. In that
debate, some Thomas supporters argued that the Senate, as a rule, should defer to the
President’s judgment concerning a nominee except when unfavorable information
is presented overcoming the presumption in the nominee’s favor.110 Opponents, by
contrast, rejected the notion that there was a presumption in favor of a Supreme
Court nominee at the start of the confirmation process or that the President, in his
selection of a nominee, is owed any special deference.111
109 In recent decades Presidents and Senators at various times have endorsed the goal of
increasing the representation of women and persons of minority ethnicity in the lower
courts, as well as on the Supreme Court, to make the judiciary more representative of the
nation’s population.
110 Among those Senators supporting the nomination, one declared that he strongly believed
“that a nominee comes to the Senate with a presumption in his favor. Accordingly,
opponents of the nominee must make the case against him, especially since Judge Thomas
has been confirmed to positions of great trust and responsibility on four separate occasions.”
Sen. Strom Thurmond, “Supreme Court of the United States,” remarks in the Senate,
Congressional Record, vol. 137, Oct. 3, 1991, p. 25257. Another Senator stated that while
his vote in favor of Judge Thomas was not “cast without some doubt, ... I have tried to insist
on every judicial nomination of every President that I would give both the President and the
nominee the benefit of the doubt.” Sen. Wyche Fowler, Jr., “Supreme Court of the United
States,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 137, Oct. 3, 1991, p. 25270.
111 During the Thomas nomination debate, for example, one Senator declared that “[i]n the
selection of a person to serve on the Nation’s highest court, in my view, the Senate is an
equal partner with the President. The President is owed no special deference, and his
nominee owed no special presumptions. We owe the public our careful and thorough
consideration and our independent judgement.” Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg, “Against the
Confirmation of Clarence Thomas,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol., 137,
Sept. 27, 1991, p. 24449. Likewise, another Senator maintained that, on “a question of such
vast and lasting significance, where the course of our future for years to come is riding on
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That Senators continue to have differing views regarding appropriate evaluation
criteria for Supreme Court nominees was apparent at Senate hearings on the judicial
selection process held on June 26, 2001. At the hearings, a Senate Judiciary
subcommittee examined the question of what role ideology should play in the
selection and confirmation of federal judges.112 In his opening remarks, the chairman
of the subcommittee, Senator Charles E. Schumer (D-NY), stated that it was clear
that “the ideology of particular nominees often plays a significant role in the
confirmation process.” The current era, he said, “certainly justifies Senate opposition
to judicial nominees whose views fall outside the mainstream and who have been
selected in an attempt to further tilt the courts in an ideological direction.”113
By contrast. Senator Orrin G. Hatch (R-UT), in testimony before the
subcommittee, declared that there “are myriad reasons why political ideology has not
been — and is not — an appropriate measure of judicial qualifications.
Fundamentally,” he continued, “the Senate’s responsibility to provide advice and
consent does not include an ideological litmus test because a nominee’s personal
opinions are largely irrelevant so long as the nominee can set those opinions aside
and follow the law fairly and impartially as a judge.”114
Filibusters and Motions to Close Debate115


Senate rules place no general limits on how long floor consideration of a
nomination (or most other matters) may last.116 With such time limits lacking,
Senators opposing a Supreme Court nominee may be able, if they are so inclined, to
111 (...continued)
our decision, the Senate should give the benefit of the doubt to the Supreme Court and to
the Constitution, not to Judge Clarence Thomas.” Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, “Nomination
of Clarence Thomas, of Georgia, To Be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record, vol. 137, Oct. 15, 1991, p.
26290.
112 For official record of the June 26, 2001 hearing, entitled “Judicial Nominations 2001:
Should Ideology Matter?”, see pp. 1-109 in U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on the
Judiciary, Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts, The Judicial
Nomination
and Confirmation Process, hearings, 107th Cong., 1st sess, June 26 & Sept. 4,
2001 (Washington: GPO, 2002), 276 p.
113 Ibid., pp. 2-3.
114 Ibid., p. 30. Soon thereafter, on September 4, 2001, the same Senate Judiciary
subcommittee held a hearing on a related issue involving judicial nominations — namely,
does the “burden of proof” lie with the nominee, to demonstrate that he or she merits
appointment to the federal bench, or with Senate opponents, to demonstrate that the nominee
is unfit for confirmation? The hearing, entitled “The Senate’s Role in the Nomination and
Confirmation Process: Whose Burden?”, featured two panels of witnesses, some arguing for,
and others against, placing the burden of proof on the nominee. See Ibid., pp. 111-218, for
official record of the September 4 hearing.
115 Much of the discussion under this sub-heading is based on, and borrows extensively
from, CRS Report RS20801, Cloture Attempts on Nominations, by Richard S. Beth.
(Hereafter cited as Beth, Cloture Attempts.)
116 As discussed earlier, however, the Senat may set time limits on debates by unanimous
consent.

CRS-37
use extended debate or other delaying actions to prevent a vote from occurring. The
use of dilatory actions for such a purpose is known as the filibuster.117
By the same token, however, supporters of a Court nomination have available
to them a procedure for placing time limits on consideration of a matter — the
motion for cloture. When the Senate adopts a cloture motion, further consideration
of the matter being filibustered is limited to 30 hours. In so doing, the Senate may
be able to ensure that a nomination will ultimately come to a vote and be decided by
a voting majority. The majority required for cloture on most matters, including
nominations, is three-fifths of the full membership of the Senate — normally 60.118
Motions to bring debate on Supreme Court nominations to a close have been
made on only three occasions.119 The first use occurred in 1968, when Senate
supporters of Justice Abe Fortas tried unsuccessfully to close debate on his
nomination to be Chief Justice. After a motion to proceed to consider the Fortas
nomination was debated at length, the Senate rejected cloture by a 45-43 vote,120
prompting President Lyndon B. Johnson to withdraw the nomination. (The 45 votes
in favor of cloture fell far short of the super-majority required — then two-thirds of
Senators present and voting.) A cloture motion to end debate on a Court nomination
occurred again in 1971, when the Senate considered the nomination of William H.
Rehnquist to be an Associate Justice. Although the cloture motion failed by a 52-42
vote,121 Rehnquist subsequently was confirmed. In 1986, a motion was filed to close
debate on a third Supreme Court nomination, this time of sitting Justice Rehnquist
to be Chief Justice. Supporters of the nomination mustered more than the three-fifths
majority needed to close debate (with the Senate voting for cloture 68-31),122 and
Justice Rehnquist subsequently was confirmed as Chief Justice.
As one news analysis observed, Senators “are traditionally hesitant to filibuster
judicial nominations.”123 Indicative of this, the article noted, was the fact that some
of the “most divisive Supreme Court nominees in recent decades, including Associate
Justice Clarence Thomas, have moved through the Senate without opponents
117 See discussion earlier in this report, regarding debatable motions and filibusters, under
the sub-heading “Bringing the Nomination to the Floor.”
118 Prior to 1975, the majority required for cloture was two-thirds of Senators present and
voting. Beth, Cloture Attempts, p. 3.
119 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 legislature measures. Ibid., p. 2.
120 “Supreme Court of the United States,” Congressional Record, vol. 114, Oct. 1, 1968,
pp. 28926-28933.
121 “Cloture Motion,”Congressional Record, vol. 117, Dec. 10, 1971, pp. 46110-46117.
122 “Nomination of William H. Rehnquist To Be Chief Justice of the United States,”
Congressional Record, vol. 132, Sept. 17, 1986, pp. 23729-23739.
123 Matthew Tully, “Senators Won’t Rule Out Filibuster of High Court Nominees,” CQ
Daily Monitor,
March 21, 2002, p. 7.

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resorting to that procedural weapon.”124 In 1991, five days of debate on the Thomas
nomination concluded with a 52-48 confirmation vote. The 48 opposition votes
would have been more than enough to defeat a cloture motion if one had been filed.
In three earlier episodes, Senate opponents of Supreme Court nominations appear to
have refrained from use of the filibuster, even though their numbers would have been
sufficient to defeat a cloture motion. In 1969, 1970 and 1987 respectively, lengthy
debate occurred on the unsuccessful nominations of Clement F. Haynsworth, G.
Harrold Carswell and Robert H. Bork. In none of these episodes, however, was a
cloture motion filed, and in each case debate ended with a Senate vote rejecting the
nomination.
Although use of the filibuster against Supreme Court nominations has been
relatively rare in the past, the number of filibusters conducted against lower court
nominations has increased dramatically in recent years. During the 108th Congress,
extended debate was successfully used in the Senate to block confirmation votes on
10 of President George W. Bush’s 34 nominees to U.S. circuit court of appeals
judgeships, and several of these nominations, after resubmission by President Bush
in the 109th Congress, again faced the prospect of being filibustered by Senate
Democrats. In response, in May of 2005, leaders of the Senate’s Republican majority
announced their intention, if filibusters against nominations continued, to amend the
chamber’s rules to require the vote of only a simple Senate majority to close Senate
debate on judicial nominations.125
A Senate confrontation between the two parties over judicial filibusters was
averted on May 23, 2005, when a compromise agreement was reached by a coalition
of seven Democratic and seven Republican Senators. As part of the agreement, the
coalition’s Democratic Senators pledged not to lend their support to filibusters
against judicial nominations except under “extraordinary circumstances,” while the
Republican Senators in the coalition agreed not to support any change in the Senate
rules to bar filibusters against judicial nominations, as long as the “spirit and
continuing commitments made in this agreement” were kept by all of Senators in the
coalition.126
In recent years, some Senators have raised the possibility of a filibuster being
conducted against a future Supreme Court nomination, particularly if a vacancy on
the Court occurred during the presidency of George W. Bush.127 In the current
124 Ibid.
125 Senate Republican leaders announced that their move to amend Senate rules to bar
filibusters against judicial nominations would occur in conjunction with their efforts to close
floor debate on the nomination of Priscilla Owen to be a U.S. circuit court of appeals judge.
(An earlier nomination of Owen to the same judgeship, during the 108th Congress, had been
filibustered successfully by Senate Democrats four times.) Keith Perine and Daphne Retter,
“Judicial Showdown Starts with Owen,” CQ Today, vol. 41, May 18, 2005.
126 Charles Babington and Shailagh Murray, “A Last-Minute Deal on Judicial Nominations,”
The Washington Post, May 24, 2005, pp. A1, A4.
127 Several Senate Democrats, it was reported in 2002, had said “they would consider
staging a filibuster if President Bush nominates to the high court a conservative not to their
(continued...)

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political climate, a filibuster against a nomination to the Court also could be regarded
as a possibility, if a substantial number of Senators opposed a nominee’s
confirmation and viewed extended debate as a tactic that might succeed in blocking
a Senate vote on confirmation from occurring. Such a strategy, however, would no
longer be an option to opponents of the nominee if the Senate’s rules, either prior to
or during debate over the nomination, were modified to curtail use of filibusters
against judicial nominations.

Voice Votes, Roll Calls, and Vote Margins
When floor debate on a nomination comes to a close, the presiding officer puts
the question of confirmation to a vote. In doing so, the presiding officer typically
states, “The question is, Will the Senate advise and consent to the nomination of
[nominee’s name] of [state of residence] to be an Associate Justice [or Chief Justice]
on the Supreme Court?” A vote to confirm requires a simple majority of Senators
present and voting. Since 1967, every Senate vote on whether to confirm a Supreme
Court nomination has been by roll call.128 Prior to 1967, by contrast, less than half
of all of Senate votes on whether to confirm nominees to the Court were by roll call,
the rest by voice vote.129 Historically, vote margins on Supreme Court nominations
have varied considerably. Some recorded votes, either confirming or rejecting a
nomination, have been close.130 Most votes, however, have been overwhelmingly in
favor of confirmation.131
127 (...continued)
liking.” Matthew Tully, “Senators Won’t Rule Out Filibuster of High Court Nominees,”
CQ Daily Monitor, March 21, 2002, p. 7. More recently, in June 2003, another Democratic
Senator declared that he would filibuster any Supreme Court nominee that he found
objectionable based on certain specified criteria. Adam Nagourney, “Senator Ready To
Filibuster over Views of Court Pick,” The New York Times, June 21, 2003, p. A13.
128 Immediately prior to the Senate’s roll-call vote in 1994 on whether to confirm Stephen
G. Breyer to be an Associate Justice, Majority Leader George J. Mitchell (D-ME), stated to
his colleagues on the floor that “it has been the practice that votes on Supreme Court
nominations are made from the Senator’s desk. I ask that Senators cast their votes from
their desks during this vote.” Congressional Record, vol. 140, July 29, 1994, p. 18704.
129 The most recent voice votes on Supreme Court nominations were those by the Senate
confirming Abe Fortas in 1965 (to be an Associate Justice) and Arthur J. Goldberg and
Byron R. White, both in 1962.
130 Since the 1960s, the closest roll calls on Supreme Court nominations were the 52-48
vote in 1991 confirming Clarence Thomas; the 45-51 vote in 1970 rejecting G. Harrold
Carswell; the 55-45 vote in 1969 rejecting Clement Haynsworth Jr.; the 58-42 vote in 1987
rejecting Robert H. Bork; and the 65-33 vote confirming William H. Rehnquist to be Chief
Justice in 1986. The closest roll calls ever cast on Supreme Court nominations were the 24-
23 vote in 1881 confirming President James A. Garfield’s nomination of Stanley Matthews
and the 25-26 vote in 1861 rejecting President James Buchanan’s nomination of Jeremiah
S. Black.
131 Since the 1960s, the most lopsided of these votes have been the unanimous roll calls
confirming 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
(continued...)

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Reconsideration of the Nomination
After a Senate vote to confirm a Supreme Court nomination, a Senator who voted
to confirm may, under Senate Rule XXXI, move to reconsider the vote.132 Under
the rule, only one such motion to reconsider is in order on each nomination, and the
tabling of the motion prevents any subsequent attempt to reconsider. The Senate
typically deals with a motion to reconsider a Supreme Court confirmation in one of
two ways. Immediately following the vote to confirm, a Senator may move to
reconsider the vote, and the motion is promptly laid upon the table by unanimous
consent.133 Alternatively, well before the vote to confirm, in a unanimous consent
agreement, the Senate may provide that, in the event of confirmation, the motion to
reconsider be tabled.134 The Senate, it should be noted, has never adopted a motion
to reconsider a Supreme Court confirmation vote.
Nominations That Failed to Be Confirmed
As noted earlier, over the course of two centuries, roughly one out of every five
Supreme Court nominations (34 out of 154 received by the Senate) has failed to be
confirmed. Eleven of the 34 were rejected outright by Senate roll-call votes. Nearly
all of the rest, in the face of substantial Judiciary 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.135 Table 2, in the following pages, provides
information on the outcome of each of the 34 unconfirmed nominations.
131 (...continued)
1988 (98-0), and the near-unanimous votes confirming Warren E. Burger in 1969 (74-3),
Lewis F. Powell Jr., in 1971 (89-1), and Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1993 (96-3).
132 “According to Senate Rule XXXI, any Senator who voted with the majority has the
option of moving to reconsider a vote on the nomination. The motion to reconsider is in
order on the day of the vote or the next two days the Senate meets in executive session. The
motion is made in executive session or, by unanimous consent, ‘as in executive session.’”
Rybicki, Senate Consideration, p. 10.
133 For example, immediately after the votes to confirm David Souter in 1990 and Clarence
Thomas in 1991, a motion in each case was made to reconsider the vote, followed by a
motion “to lay that motion on the table,” which was agreed to by the Senate. See
Congressional Record, vol. 136, Oct. 2, 1990, p. 26997 and Congressional Record, vol. 137,
Oct. 15, 1991, p. 26354.
134 By unanimous consent, the Senate in 1993 and 1994, for example, agreed that the
motion to reconsider be tabled upon confirmation, respectively, of the Supreme Court
nominations of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G. Breyer. See “Unanimous-Consent
Agreement,” Congressional Record, vol. 139, July 30, 1993, p. 17996, and “Unanimous-
Consent Agreement,” Congressional Record, vol. 140, July 28, 1994, p. 18544.
135 Five of the unconfirmed nominations, it again should be noted, involved individuals
who subsequently were renominated and confirmed. See above in this report, footnote 13,
regarding the re-nominations, and subsequent confirmations of William Paterson (1793).
Roger B. Taney (1835), Stanley Matthews (1881), Pierce Butler (1922), and John W. Harlan
II (1954-1955).

CRS-41
Various scholars have analyzed or provided a broad overview of factors
associated with unsuccessful Supreme Court nominations,136 including a recently
issued report by the Congressional Research Service.137 In a history of Supreme
Court appointments from Presidents Washington to Clinton, one scholar has
identified eight of the more “prominent reasons” why Supreme Court nominations
were ‘’rejected either outright or simply were not acted on by the Senate,” listing
these reasons as the following:
(1) opposition to the nominating president, not necessarily the nominee; (2) the
nominee’s involvement with one or more contentious issues of public policy or,
simply, opposition to the nominee’s perceived jurisprudential or sociopolitical
philosophy (i.e., politics); (3) opposition to the record of the incumbent Court,
which, rightly or wrongly, the nominee presumably supported; (4) senatorial
courtesy (closely linked to the consultative nominating process); (5) a nominee’s
perceived political unreliability on the part of the party in power; (6) the evident
lack of qualification or limited ability of the nominee; (7) concerted, sustained
opposition by interest or pressure groups; and (8) fear that the nominee would
dramatically alter the Court’s jurisprudential lineup. Usually several of these
reasons — not one alone — figure in the rejection of a nominee, to which poor
timing and poor presidential management of a nomination — e.g., Reagan in
Bork’s case — could readily be added.138
Another scholar, in analyzing the ill-fated nominations of Abe Fortas (1968),
Clement F. Haynsworth Jr. (1969), G. Harrold Carswell (1970) and Robert H. Bork
(1987), has focused on the “rich interplay among the three leading factors associated
with unsuccessful Supreme Court nominations,” specifically, “the Senate’s
perception of the nominee’s ideology,” the “timing of the nomination,” and “a less
appreciated” factor, “presidential management of the confirmation process.”139
The timing of a nomination may create problems for confirmation of a Supreme
Court nominee, especially against an election backdrop. Timing, for example, might
be less favorable for a nomination if it is made during the last year of a President’s
term, if the President is not seeking re-election, if his re-election prospects are
doubtful, or if an off-year election is approaching in which the President’s party is
expected to lose Senate seats. Such circumstances might influence some Senators
to delay action on a nomination, in order to allow the next President to make the
appointment or the next Senate to decide whether to confirm.140
136 For a lengthy bibliographic listing of scholarly sources who deal directly with the
factors associated with unsuccessful Supreme Court nominations. see Massaro, Supremely
Political,
page 218, note 4.
137 Hogue, Nominations Not Confirmed..
138 Abraham, Justices, Presidents and Senators, p. 28.
139 Massaro, Supremely Political, p. xi.
140 Massaro, Supremely Political, p. 139, writes that a nomination made “during the last full
year of a president’s term or in the interregnum period after a new chief executive has been
elected presents an additional factor upon which to base opposition to confirmation.” The
vacancy’s “unfavorable timing,” he explains, can “generate opposition of its own as well as
(continued...)

CRS-42
Table 2. Supreme Court Nominations Not Confirmed
by the Senate
Nominee
President
Date Received
Final Action by
Date(s) of
in Senate a
Senate and/or
Final Action
President b
William Paterson
Washington
Feb. 27, 1793
Withdrawn
Feb. 28, 1793
John Rutledge (for
Washington
Dec. 10, 1795
Rejected (10-14)
Dec. 15, 1795
Chief Justice)
Alexander Wolcott
Madison
Feb. 4, 1811
Rejected (9-24)
Feb. 13, 1811
John J. Crittenden
J.Q. Adams
Dec. 18, 1828
Postponed (23-17)
Feb. 12, 1829
Roger B. Taney
Jackson
Jan. 15, 1835
Postponed (24-21)
Mar. 3, 1835
John C. Spencer
Tyler
Jan. 9, 1844
Rejected (21-26)
Jan. 31, 1844
Reuben H. Walworth
Tyler
Mar. 13, 1844
Tabled (27-20),
June 15, 1844,
Withdrawn
June 17, 1844
Edward King
Tyler
June 5, 1844
Postponed (29-18)
June 15, 1844
John C. Spencer
Tyler
June 17, 1844
Withdrawn
June 17, 1844
Reuben H. Walworth
Tyler
June 17, 1844
No action recorded
Reuben H. Walworth
Tyler
Dec. 10, 1844
Tabled,
Jan. 21, 1845,
Withdrawn
Feb. 6, 1845
Edward King
Tyler
Dec. 10, 1844
Tabled,
Jan. 21, 1845,
Withdrawn
Feb. 8, 1845
John M. Read
Tyler
Feb. 8, 1845
No action recorded
George W.
Polk
Dec. 23, 1845
Rejected (20-29)
Jan. 22, 1846
Woodward
Edward A. Bradford
Fillmore
Aug. 21, 1852
Tabled
Aug. 31, 1852
George E. Badger
Fillmore
Jan. 10, 1853
Postponed (26-25)
Feb. 11, 1853
William C. Micou
Fillmore
Feb. 24, 1853
No action recorded
Jeremiah S. Black
Buchanan
Feb. 6, 1861
Rejected (25-26)
Feb. 21, 1861
Henry Stanbery
A. Johnson
Apr. 16, 1866
No action recorded
Ebenezer R. Hoar
Grant
Dec. 15, 1869
Rejected (24-33)
Feb. 3, 1870
George H. Williams
Grant
Dec. 2, 1873
Withdrawn
Jan. 8, 1874
(for Chief Justice)
Caleb Cushing (for
Grant
Jan. 9, 1874
Withdrawn
Jan. 14, 1874
Chief Justice)
Stanley Matthews
Hayes
Jan. 26, 1881
No action recorded
Wm. B. Hornblower
Cleveland
Sept. 19, 1893
No action recorded
Wm. B. Hornblower
Cleveland
Dec. 6, 1893
Rejected (24-30)
Jan. 15, 1894
Wheeler H. Peckham
Cleveland
Jan. 22, 1894
Rejected (32-41)
Feb. 16, 1894
140 (...continued)
activate the otherwise dormant ideological resistance, significantly increasing the likelihood
of the Senate’s refusal to confirm. This is readily seen in the remarkably high refusal rate
of seventy-one percent (ten of fourteen) for such nominations when they are also forwarded
to a Senate in which the chief executive’s party is in the minority.”

CRS-43
Nominee
President
Date Received
Final Action by
Date(s) of
in Senate a
Senate and/or
Final Action
President b
Pierce Butler
Harding
Nov. 23, 1922
No action recorded
John. J. Parker
Hoover
Mar. 21, 1930
Rejected (39-41)
May 7, 1930
John M. Harlan
Eisenhower
Nov. 9, 1954
No action record
Abe Fortas (for
L. Johnson
June 26, 1968
Cloture motion
Oct. 1, 1968,
Chief Justice)
defeated (45-43),
Withdrawn
Oct. 4, 1968
Homer Thornberry
L. Johnson
June 26, 1968
Withdrawn
Oct. 4, 1968
Clement F.
Nixon
Aug. 18, 1969
Rejected (45-55)
Nov. 21, 1969
Haynsworth, Jr.
G. Harrold Carswell
Nixon
Jan. 19, 1970
Rejected (45-51)
Apr. 8, 1970
Robert H. Bork
Nixon
July 7, 1987
Rejected (42-58)
Oct. 23, 1987
Sources: Journal of the Executive Proceedings of the Senate of the United States of America (various
volumes); U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, Supreme Court Nominations
Not Confirmed, 1789-2004
, by Henry B. Hogue, CRS Report RL31171.
Italics — Later renominated and confirmed.
Boldface — Later nominated for Chief Justice and confirmed.
a The date in this column is the date on which the President’s nomination message was received in the
Senate. This date may differ from the date of the message itself.
b Indicates whether there was final action by the Senate (rejecting, postponing action on, tabling, or
rejecting a motion to close debate on the nomination) or by the President (withdrawing the
nomination).
A nominee’s prospects also may be put in jeopardy if a President has not used
careful presidential management to pave the way for a smooth confirmation process.
Among other things, sound presidential management of the process, it has been
suggested, entails good-faith consultation with the Senate before choosing a nominee,
especially if the President’s party is in the Senate minority. Another element of
sound presidential management is selecting a nominee without obvious liabilities or
attributes that are likely to generate serious Senate opposition.141
Calling Upon the Judiciary Committee to
Further Examine the Nomination

Sometimes, after a Supreme Court nomination has been reported, the Senate
may delay considering or voting on the nomination, in order to have the Senate
Judiciary Committee address new issues concerning the nominee or more fully
141 The Fortas, Haynsworth, Carswell and Bork nominations, one scholar wrote, were all
instances in which Presidents failed to give enough care to presidential management of the
confirmation process. In the cases of the Fortas, Haynsworth and Carswell nominations,
he writes, opposition was “needlessly increased” when Presidents, without ensuring that
“positive relationships with senators” were maintained, nominated individuals who were
“vulnerable to non-ideological, non-partisan charges.” Massaro, Supremely Political, pp.
140-142. In nominating Robert H. Bork, President Ronald Reagan, according to the author,
fell short in exercising presidential management by failing to anticipate potential opposition
in the Senate to a “controversial individual” at “a time demanding a careful and conciliatory
course.” Ibid., p. 190

CRS-44
examine issues that it addressed earlier. Opponents of a nomination may also seek
such delay, through recommittal of the nomination to the committee, to defeat the
nomination indirectly, by burying it in committee.
Recommittals of Supreme Court Nominations. Although the Senate has
never adopted a motion to reconsider a Supreme Court nomination after a
confirmation vote, there have been at least eight pre-vote attempts to recommit
Supreme Court nomination to the Judiciary Committee.142 Only two of these were
successful. In the first of these two instances, in 1873-1874, the nomination, after
being recommitted, stalled in committee until it was withdrawn by the President. In
the second instance, in 1925, the Judiciary Committee re-reported the nomination,
which the Senate then confirmed.
On December 15, 1873, on the second day of its consideration of the nomination
of Attorney General George H. Williams to be Chief Justice, the Senate ordered the
nomination to be recommitted to the Judiciary Committee.143 The nomination had
been favorably reported by the committee only four days earlier. During that four-
day interval, however, various allegations were made against Williams, including
charges that while Attorney General he had used his office to influence decisions
profiting private companies in which he held interests.144 In ordering the nomination
to be recommitted, the Senate authorized the Judiciary Committee “to send for
persons and papers”145 — in evident reference to the new allegations made against
the nominee. Although the Judiciary held hearings after the recommittal, it did not
re-report the nomination back to the Senate. Amid press reports of significant
opposition to the nomination both in the Judiciary Committee and the Senate as a
whole,146 the nomination, at Williams’s request, was withdrawn by President Ulysses
S. Grant on January 8, 1874.147
142 Besides the successful attempts in the Senate to recommit the nominations of George H.
Williams as Chief Justice in 1873 and Harlan F. Stone as Associate Justice in 1925 (both
discussed in this report), six other unsuccessful attempts to recommit Supreme Court
nominations are recorded — specifically, the motions to recommit President Ulysses S.
Grant’s nomination of Joseph P. Bradley in 1870, President Warren G. Harding’s
nomination of Pierce Butler in 1922, President Herbert Hoover’s nomination of Charles
Evans Hughes as Chief Justice in 1930, President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s nomination of
Hugo L. Black in 1937, President Harry S. Truman’s nomination of Sherman Minton in
1949, and President Richard M. Nixon’s nomination of G. Harrold Carswell in 1970.
Congressional Quarterly Almanac; 91st Congress; 2nd Session,1970, vol. 26, 1971, p. 161.
143 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. (Hereafter cited as Senate
Executive Journal.
)
144 Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected , p. 86.
145 Senate Executive Journal, vol. 19, p. 189.
146 See, e.g., “The Chief Justiceship,” New York Tribune, Jan. 6, 1874, p. 1, which reported
that the President “has at last discovered that the nomination of Mr. Williams to be Chief-
Justice of the Supreme Court is not only a very unpopular one, but that his confirmation will
be impossible....” See also Jacobstein and Mersky, The Rejected, pp. 84-86.
147 Senate Executive Journal, vol. 19, p. 211.

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On January 26, 1925, the Senate recommitted the Supreme Court nomination
of Attorney General Harlan F. Stone to the Judiciary Committee. Earlier, on January
21, the Judiciary Committee had favorably reported the nomination to the Senate.
However, one historian writes, “Stone’s unanimous Judiciary Committee approval
ran into trouble when it reached the Senate floor.”148 A principal point of concern to
some Senators was the decision made by Stone as Attorney General in December
1924 to expand a federal criminal investigation of Senator Burton K. Wheeler (D-
MT) — an investigation initiated by Stone’s predecessor as Attorney General, Harry
Daugherty. Stone’s most prominent critic on this point, Montana’s other Democratic
Senator, Thomas J. Walsh, demanded that the nomination be returned to the Judiciary
Committee.149 By unanimous consent the Senate agreed, ordering the nomination to
be “rereferred to the Committee on the Judiciary with a request that it be reported
back to the Senate as soon as practicable.”150 Two days after the recommittal, on
January 28, the Judiciary Committee held hearings, with the nominee, at the
committee’s invitation, taking the then-unprecedented step of appearing before the
committee. Under lengthy cross examination by Senator Walsh and several other
Senators, the nominee defended his role in the Wheeler investigation.151 On February
2, 1925, the Judiciary Committee again reported the Stone nomination favorably to
the Senate, “by voice vote, without dissent,”152 and on February 5, 1925, the Senate
confirmed Stone by a 71-6 vote.
Delay for Additional Committee Hearings Without Recommitting the
Nomination. In 1991, during debate on Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas,
the Senate — without recommitting the nomination to the Judiciary Committee —
delayed its scheduled vote on the nomination specifically to allow the committee
time for additional hearings on the nominee. On October 8, 1991, after four days of
debate, the Senate, by unanimous consent, rescheduled its vote on the Thomas
nomination, from October 8 to October 15. The purpose of this delay was to allow
the Judiciary Committee to hold hearings on sexual harassment allegations made
against the nominee by law professor Anita Hill, which had come to public light only
after the Judiciary Committee had ordered the Thomas nomination to be reported,
without recommendation, on September 27.153 Following three days of hearings, on
148 Abraham, Justices, Presidents and Senators, p. 147.
149 Thorpe, Appearance of Nominees, p. 372.
150 Senate Executive Journal, vol. 63, p. 293.
151 Thorpe, Appearance of Supreme Court Nominees, pp. 372-373.
152 Abraham, Justices, Presidents and Senators, p. 147.
153 In October 8, 1991, floor remarks, Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell (D-ME)
explained the need to delay the Thomas vote: “It is most unfortunate that we have been
placed in this situation. But events which are unpredictable, unplanned, and unfortunate can
and frequently do intervene and cause a change in the plans of human beings. That has now
occurred in this matter, in my judgment.
“For that reason, I believe the action we have taken to change the time of the scheduled
vote until next Tuesday [October 15], and to give time for further inquiry into this matter
by the Judiciary Committee, is an appropriate action.” Sen. George J. Mitchell, “Unanimous
Consent Agreement,” remarks in the Senate, Congressional Record,, vol, 137, Oct. 8, 1991,
(continued...)

CRS-46
October 11, 12, and 13, 1991, at which the Judiciary Committee heard testimony
from Judge Thomas, Professor Hill, and other witnesses, the Senate, pursuant to its
unanimous consent agreement, voted on the Thomas nomination as scheduled, on
October 15, 1991, confirming the nominee by a 52-48 vote.
After Senate Confirmation
Under the Constitution, the Senate alone votes on whether to confirm
presidential nominations, the House of Representatives having no formal
involvement in the confirmation process. If the Senate votes to confirm the
nomination, the secretary of the Senate then attests to a resolution of confirmation
and transmits it to the White House.154 In turn, the President signs a document, called
a commission, officially appointing the individual to the Court. Then, the following
technical steps occur:
The signed commission is returned to the Justice Department for engraving the
date of appointment . . . and for the signature of the attorney general and the
placing of the Justice Department seal. The deputy attorney general then sends
the commission by registered mail to the appointee, along with the oath of office
and a photocopy of the confirmation document from the Senate.155
Upon the appointee’s receipt of the commission and accompanying documents,
only the formality of being sworn into office remains. In fact, however, the incoming
Justice takes two oaths of office — a judicial oath, as required by the Judiciary Act
of 1789, and a constitutional oath, which, as required by Article VI of the U.S.
Constitution, is administered to Members of Congress and all executive and judicial
officers. In recent years, the usual practice of new appointees has been to take their
judicial oath in private within the Court, and, as desired by the Presidents who
nominated them, to take their constitutional oaths in nationally televised ceremonies
at the White House.156
Conclusion
Over the course of more than two centuries, the Supreme Court appointment
process has undergone important changes, while remaining constant in other key
respects. The process is now much longer than it used to be. From the appointment
153 (...continued)
p. 25920.
154 If, on the other hand, the Senate votes against confirmation, a resolution of disapproval
is forwarded to the President.
155 Sheldon Goldman, Picking Federal Judges; Lower Court Selection form Roosevelt
Through Reagan
(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1997), p. 12.
156 The Court itself regards the date a Justice takes the judicial oath as the beginning of his
or her service, “for until that oath is taken he/she is not vested with the prerogatives of the
office.” Supreme Court of the United States, The Supreme Court of the United States
(Washington: Published by the Supreme Court with the cooperation of the Supreme Court
Historical Society, undated), p. 24.

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of the first Justices in 1789, continuing well into the twentieth century, most Senate
confirmations of Supreme Court nominees occurred within a week of the
nominations being made by the President. In recent decades, by contrast, it has
become the norm for appointment to the Court, from nomination by the President to
confirmation by the Senate, to take from two to three months, with the process even
longer if a nomination is controversial.
The process is also much more open now than it once was. From the outset,
starting with George Washington, and for more than a hundred years thereafter,
Presidents transmitted their nominations to the Senate without public fanfare, and the
confirmation process that followed in the Senate Judiciary Committee and the Senate
as a whole likewise occurred away from public view, in closed executive sessions.
By contrast, in the modern appointment process, Presidents typically announce their
Supreme Court nominations to the nation before broadcast television cameras in
carefully staged presidential news events. In turn, nearly all of the official
confirmation process that follows — confirmation hearings by the Judiciary
Committee, the committee’s vote on the nominee, Senate debate, and finally Senate
vote on the nomination — is conducted in public session, receives intensive news
media coverage, and is watched by hundreds of thousands (and sometimes millions)
of American television viewers.
In another major change from earlier practice, there are now many more
participants in the Supreme Court appointment process. Whereas until 1868, the
Senate Judiciary Committee, more often than not, was excluded from the process,
it is now the Judiciary Committee, rather than the Senate as a whole, which is
charged with the principal responsibility for investigating the background and
qualifications of each Supreme Court nominee. Also, historically, nominees did not
participate in the appointment process, but now they regularly appear before the
Judiciary Committee. Likewise, in the modern era, public witnesses testify during
each confirmation hearing. Among the witnesses are representatives of powerful
interest groups, which often take positions in support of or in opposition to a
nominee’s confirmation. If a nominee is controversial, interest groups may commit
themselves to sustained involvement in the confirmation process, mounting support
for, or opposition to, a nominee at the very beginning of the process, and seeking
through publicity, lobbying and grass-roots efforts of their members, to influence
how both the Judiciary Committee and the Senate as a whole vote on the nomination.
From the beginning, an almost unchanging theme underlying the Supreme Court
appointment process has been the assumed need for excellence or merit in a nominee
as a requisite for appointment to the Court. The continuing expectation of high
qualification in nominees has been demonstrated by the Senate’s periodic rejection
of nominees for alleged lack of qualification.
Also from the beginning, politics, as well as the search for excellence, has
played a continuing, important role in Supreme Court appointments. The political
nature of the Supreme Court appointment process becomes especially apparent when
a President submits a nominee with controversial views, there are sharp partisan or
ideological differences between the President and the Senate, or the outcome of
important constitutional issues before the Court is seen to be at stake. Under these

CRS-48
and other circumstances, divisions may occur in the Senate, bringing to the fore the
differing political views of Senators supporting and those opposing the nominee.
If the nomination of a person to the Supreme Court sometimes produces
confirmation battles, the appointment process at other times is remarkable for its lack
of conflict, particularly when the Senate votes overwhelmingly for confirmation.
Various factors might be present when a Supreme Court appointment process is
characterized more by harmony than by conflict. At the start of the process, for
example, there might be close consultation between the President and Senate
members over suitable candidates for the Court; the President may choose a
distinguished, uncontroversial nominee who immediately attracts widespread support
from Senators of both parties; the President’s party might be in firm numerical
superiority in the Senate (thus discouraging detractors of the nominee from mounting
vigorous opposition); or a particular Court vacancy might not be regarded as of great
moment to the future of the Court (in contrast to vacancy situations where opposing
political interests perceive very much to be at stake).
Over more than two centuries, the Supreme Court appointment process has
remained constant in one other, constitutionally fundamental respect — in the
sharing of the appointment power between the President and the Senate. No Justice
has ever been appointed for life to the Court except through this shared process of
appointment (although, as noted earlier, Presidents on rare occasions have made
temporary “recess appointments” to the Court without the Senate’s consent).
Whenever a new Supreme Court vacancy occurs, the President and the Senate
face a situation that is both unique and familiar. Unique are the political
circumstances of the moment, and the legal controversies that loom before the Court
at that point in time. Familiar are the basic roles to be performed in the appointment
process. Following a pattern adhered to for more than 200 years, the President and
the Senate will again share the appointment power. One will nominate, the other will
decide whether to confirm. Only when the two reach agreement may a new Justice
join eight others on the Supreme Court of the United States.

CRS-49
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Jacobstein, J. Myron, and Roy M. Mersky. The Rejected: Sketches of the 26 Men
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Silverstein, Mark. Judicious Choices: The New Politics of Supreme Court
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Ward, Artemus. Deciding To Leave: The Politics of Retirement from the United
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Watson, George L, and John A. Stookey. Shaping America: the Politics of Supreme
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CRS Reports
CRS Report RL32821. Chief Justice of the United States: Responsibilities of the
Office and Process for Appointment, by Denis Steven Rutkus and Lorraine
Tong.
CRS Report RS32878. Cloture Attempts on Nominations, by Richard S. Beth and
Betsy Palmer.
CRS General Distribution Memorandum. Criteria Used by Senators to Evaluate
Judicial Nominations, by Denis Steven Rutkus (available from author).
CRS Report RL31948. Evolution of the Senate’s Role in the Nomination and
Confirmation Process: A Brief History, by Betsy Palmer.
CRS Report RL31112. Recess Appointments of Federal Judges, by Louis Fisher.
CRS Report RL31980. Senate Consideration of Presidential Nominations:
Committee and Floor Procedure, by Elizabeth Rybicki.
CRS Multimedia MM70010. The Supreme Court Appointment Process, by Steve
Rutkus (52 minutes).
CRS Report 93-290 GOV. The Supreme Court Appointment Process: Should It Be
Reformed?, by Denis Steven Rutkus.
CRS Report RL31171. Supreme Court Nominations Not Confirmed, 1789-2004, by
Henry B. Hogue.