

 
 INSIGHTi  
Supreme Court Vacancies That Occurred 
During Presidential Election Years (1789-2020) 
October 1, 2020 
The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on September 18, 2020, created a vacancy on the Supreme 
Court during a presidential election year. This is the 14th such vacancy on the Court that has occurred 
during a presidential election year from 1789 to 2020 and that also occurred prior to the election date 
itself. Information and analysis related to these 14 vacancies are presented below.  
The fol owing election-year vacancies on the Supreme Court fal  outside the scope of this Insight: (1) four 
vacancies that arose during presidential election years but occurred after the general election date; (2) 
eight vacancies that arose during the year prior to a presidential election year and stil  existed, for at least 
some period of time, during the election year itself; (3) two anticipated future vacancies on the Court that 
occurred in 1968 (i.e., vacancies that did not exist when President Johnson submitted nominations to the 
Senate); and (4) six initial  vacancies on the Court when it was first established by Congress in 1789. 
Information about these vacancies is available from the author upon request by congressional readers. 
For comprehensive analysis of the Supreme Court nomination and confirmation process, see CRS Report 
R44235 (addressing the selection of a nominee by a President), CRS Report R44236 (addressing the role 
of the Senate Judiciary Committee in processing nominations), and CRS Report R44234 (addressing 
Senate debate and final action on nominations).  
Some Senators have cal ed for the Ginsburg vacancy to be fil ed after the inauguration of the winner of 
the presidential election on November 3, 2020. Other Senators have cal ed on the Senate to consider 
President Trump’s nominee for the vacancy, Judge Amy Coney Barrett, prior to the election. This Insight 
does not take a position as to when the Senate should confirm a nominee to the Ginsburg vacancy. 
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Senate Action on Nominations for Vacancies that 
Occurred During Presidential Election Years 
Nomination Submitted During Election Year 
As shown by Figure 1, 12 (86%) of 14 vacancies that arose during a presidential election year prior to the 
election had a nomination submitted to the Senate during that same year. For these 12 vacancies, 7 (58%) 
had a nominee confirmed during the election year, 4 (33%) did not have a nominee confirmed during the 
election year, and 1 is the current Ginsburg vacancy. The most recent vacancy that arose during a 
presidential election year for which a nominee was not confirmed was the vacancy created by the death of 
Justice Antonin Scalia in 2016 (prior to this, 1852 was the most recent presidential election year during 
which a nomination was submitted and not confirmed by the Senate). 
Of the seven vacancies that arose during presidential election years, and also had a nomination submitted 
and confirmed that same year, six featured unified party control (i.e., the party of the President was the 
same as the Senate majority party) and one featured divided party control (i.e., the party of the President 
was different than the Senate majority party). Of the four presidential election-year vacancies for which 
nominations were submitted during the election year but not confirmed, each featured divided party 
control. 
No Nomination Submitted During Election Year 
Figure 1 also shows that 2 (14%) of 14 vacancies that arose during a presidential election year did not 
have a nomination submitted until the following calendar year. In one case (the Black nomination), the 
nomination was rejected by a Senate floor vote. In another case (the Brennan nomination), the nominee 
was confirmed by the Senate after he received a recess appointment during the preceding presidential 
election year. 
The Black nomination featured unified party control (a Democratic President and Democratic Senate 
majority) while the Brennan nomination featured divided party control (a Republican President and 
Democratic Senate majority). 
Variation in Number of Days from Vacancy Occurring to 
Presidential Election Date 
Figure 1 shows, for each of the 14 vacancies that arose during a presidential election year, the number of 
days from the vacancy occurring to the date of that year’s presidential election.  
For the 14 vacancies, the average number of days a vacancy arose prior to a presidential election was 175 
days, or approximately 5.8 months (the median was 177 days). 
For the seven vacancies that occurred during a presidential election year and for which a nominee was 
confirmed the same year, the average number of days from the vacancy occurring to the election date was 
227 days, or approximately 7.5 months (the median was 281 days). For the four vacancies that occurred 
during a presidential election year and for which a nominee was not confirmed the same year, the average 
number of days from the vacancy occurring to the election date was 159 days, or approximately 5.2 
months (the median was 150 days). 
The shortest period of time from a vacancy occurring to a presidential election date occurred in 1956, 
when Justice Sherman Minton assumed senior status on October 15, 1956 (22 days prior to the 
  
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presidential election). Wil iam  Brennan, Jr., received a recess appointment by President Eisenhower on 
that same date (October 15). The following year, Mr. Brennan was renominated by President Eisenhower 
and confirmed by the Senate. 
The second-shortest period of time occurred in 1864, when Chief Justice Roger Taney died on October 
12, 1864 (27 days prior to the presidential election). Salmon Chase was nominated for the Taney vacancy 
on December 6, 1864, 29 days after the presidential election. Mr. Chase was confirmed on the same day 
he was nominated. 
The third-shortest period of time from a vacancy occurring to a presidential election date is the current 
vacancy created by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on September 18, 2020 (46 days prior to the 
presidential election on November 3, 2020). 
 
  

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Figure 1. Supreme Court Vacancies That Occurred Prior to the Election During 
Presidential Election Years 
(1789-2020) 
 
Source: Congressional  Research Service. 
 
 
  
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Author Information 
 
Barry J. McMillion 
   
Analyst in American National Government 
 
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff 
to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of 
Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other than public understanding of 
information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in connection with CRS’s institutional role. 
CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not subject to copyright protection in the United 
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as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or material from a third party, you may need to obtain the 
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