Senate Judiciary advances five Trump judicial picks, including Bove, as Democrats stage walkout

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The Senate Judiciary Committee advanced the nomination of Emil Bove, a senior Justice Department official and former personal attorney to President Donald Trump, to the Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday, as Democrats staged a walkout over what they called an abuse of committee process.

The panel approved Bove and four district court nominees along party lines, moving the Trump administration’s latest slate of judicial picks closer to confirmation. A full Senate vote on Bove could come as early as next week.

President Donald Trump’s former lawyer, Emil Bove, appears in State Supreme Court in Manhattan on Thursday, April 25, 2024, in New York. (Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times via AP, Pool)

Senate Democrats exited the hearing in protest, claiming Republicans cut off debate and denied them a chance to speak. Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) gave an extended floor speech accusing Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) of breaking Senate rules and rushing the vote.

“This is just wrong in every way,” Booker said. “You are a good man. You are a decent man. Why are you doing this? What is Donald Trump saying to you that is making you do something which is violating the decorum of this committee?”

Grassley dismissed Democratic concerns over the vote’s handling, saying that in his years on the committee, he’s seen “a lot of confirmation fights.”

“What we’re witnessing has all the hallmarks of a political hit job timed for maximum media splash with minimum substance,” Grassley said.

Bove, who represented Trump during criminal cases pursued by Democratic prosecutors and the Biden administration, has come under fire by Democrats for his role in several high-profile decisions, including the removal of prosecutors who handled Jan. 6 riot cases, the dismissal of corruption charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, and allegations that he suggested the DOJ defy court orders in immigration enforcement.

Over 900 former DOJ attorneys have urged the committee not to confirm Bove, while senior officials, including staff for Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, have dismissed the outcry from advocacy groups for former DOJ officials, such as Justice Connection, as a “political hit squad.”

But under sworn testimony, Bove rejected the accusations. He told senators he was not involved in any effort to broker or dangle pardons to Jan. 6 defendants, denied that the Adams case was dismissed for political reasons, and stated he never instructed subordinates to ignore lawful court orders. Rather, Bove maintained that all decisions were made based on the law and prosecutorial discretion.

Attorney General Pam Bondi has also dismissed the attacks on Bove as politically motivated attempts to derail a qualified nominee. She has defended his record as “principled and fearless,” and GOP lawmakers echoed that support during Thursday’s session.

In addition to party-line fighting over the nominees on Thursday, Booker raised concerns related to the fallout of the DOJ’s release of information related to the late disgraced financier and sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, as Trump has endured outrage from his base over his DOJ’s seeming reversal on promises to release additional Epstein-related records.

Booker on Wednesday also pressed for any records relating to Bove’s alleged “participation” in handling the rollout of Epstein-related materials, “given the contradictory statements by Attorney General Bondi concerning the existence of an Epstein ‘client list’ and the DOJ’s stated commitment to transparency.” Similar criticism has been lobbed by the American Values Alliance, a group that involves former Biden White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates, which said in a statement that the Senate “owes the American people transparency into any involvement Bove has had in the Epstein matter.”

DOJ TORCHES ‘DISGRUNTLED’ LEAKER TARGETING TRUMP JUDICIAL NOMINEE EMIL BOVE

Alongside Bove, the committee approved four Trump-nominated judges to district courts in Florida: Ed Artau for the Southern District and Kyle Dudek, Anne-Leigh Gaylord Moe, and Jordan E. Pratt for the Middle District.

The committee also considered a slate of U.S. Attorney nominees, including Kurt Alme (Montana), Nicholas W. Chase (North Dakota), Lesley Murphy (Nebraska), Jeanine Pirro (District of Columbia), Daniel Rosen (Minnesota), Erik Siebert (Eastern District of Virginia), and Kurt Wall (Middle District of Louisiana). 

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