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Trump will be able to nominate more federal judges who serve for life

JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:

During President-elect Donald Trump's first term in office, appointing federal judges became one of his biggest accomplishments. Legal experts predict Trump will move quickly next year to cement and extend that legacy. NPR justice correspondent Carrie Johnson reports.

CARRIE JOHNSON, BYLINE: Donald Trump installed more than 220 federal judges during his stint in the White House with a lot of help from a Republican-led Senate. Now, as Trump prepares to return to office, he enjoys some substantial advantages this time around.

JESSE PANUCCIO: The President will have a ready pool of potential nominees who he already knows and is comfortable with.

JOHNSON: That's Jesse Panuccio. He's a former top official in the Trump Justice Department. Panuccio points out Trump is the first president since 1893 to have served nonconsecutive terms in office.

PANUCCIO: And interestingly, and perhaps different from anything we've ever seen since Grover Cleveland, the president is going to have the opportunity to have seen how these appointments - these appointees - have performed on the bench for several years now.

JOHNSON: Next year Republicans will again control the Senate with 53 votes, giving the Trump White House plenty of running room to confirm judge nominees. Russell Wheeler is a fellow at the Brookings Institution.

RUSSELL WHEELER: And if the Senate goes about confirming judges with the same ferocity that it did during the first Trump administration, I would say he would have a pretty good chance to change the composition of the Federal Court - certainty the Courts of Appeals - quite dramatically.

JOHNSON: Because these judges serve for life and because Trump has tended to choose younger people for these jobs, Wheeler says...

WHEELER: We could be looking at Trump judiciary for the next generation or so.

JOHNSON: In the Biden years, the White House made a major push for diverse judge nominees. Nearly two in three of the Biden judges are women and many of them are people of color. Again, Russell Wheeler.

WHEELER: The number of white males Biden appointed to the bench, you could almost count on your hands and your fingers and toes.

JOHNSON: Legal experts say they think Trump will select judges based on other factors.

WHEELER: Just a guess here that personal loyalty will be a standard that Trump will elevate in the second term. I don't think he wants to appoint anybody who might not decide cases the way he wants them, especially when they involve him.

JOHNSON: A key question for next year is whether Trump's interest in loyalty could alienate some Republicans in the Senate. Edward Whelan works at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, a conservative think tank.

EDWARD WHELAN: Back in 2005, when President George W. Bush nominated Harriet Miers to fill Sandra Day O'Connor's seat, the conservative legal movement erupted in opposition to that pick.

JOHNSON: Miers, a friend of the president, eventually withdrew her nomination. Whelan says federal judges must meet a higher bar than some other appointees.

WHELAN: The takeaway from that is that a Republican president proceeds at great risk if he nominates someone who is simply a loyalist or someone who is seen as not qualified.

JOHNSON: Skye Perryman leads Democracy Forward, a left-leaning group that advocates for progressive causes and judges. Perryman says she expects Trump to advance what she calls extreme nominees. But she says there is a possible check on that process.

SKYE PERRYMAN: There is opportunity to highlight and hold senators accountable, including Republican senators, should they confirm judges that are out of step with what the vast majority of Americans hope and believe.

JOHNSON: Senators will have to decide if loyalty to Trump, winner of the U.S. popular vote for the first time, is worth the risk of voter backlash. Carrie Johnson, NPR News, Washington. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Carrie Johnson is a justice correspondent for the Washington Desk.