Vote vote vote the presiding officer are there any senators in the chamber wishing to vote or change their vote . If no, the on this vote the yeas are 516789 the nays are 31. Threefifths having not voted in the affirmative, the motion is not agreed to. The majority leader. Mr. Mcconnell i enter a motion to reconsider the vote. The motion is entered. Mr. Mcconnell i move to have proceed to executive session to consider calendar number 355. The presiding officer the question is on the motion to proceed. All in favor say aye. Those opposed no. The ayes appear to have it. The ayes do have it. The motion is agreed to. The clerk will report the nomination. The clerk nomination, the judiciary, David Austin Tapp of kentucky to be a judge of the United States court of federal claims. Mr. Mcconnell i send a cloture motion to the desk. The presiding officer the clerk will report the cloture motion. The clerk cloture motion, we the undersigned senators in accordance with the provisions of rule 22
Senators praise Biden s nominee for appellate judgeship June 30 2021
Jennifer Sung, who sits on the Oregon Employment Relations Board, is a labor lawyer and union organizer.
Jennifer Sung, a longtime labor lawyer from Portland who sits on the Oregon Employment Relations Board, is President Joe Biden s nominee for a federal appeals court judgeship.
If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, she will fill the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals seat vacated by Susan Graber, who will take senior status. Graber, who turns 72 on July 5, was appointed to the appeals court by President Bill Clinton in 1997 and took her seat in 1998. She is a former Oregon Court of Appeals judge and Oregon Supreme Court justice and sat on those courts a total of 10 years mostly on the Supreme Court (1990-98).
LOS ANGELES â A panel of judges from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday temporarily froze the deadlines of a federal order to offer housing or shelter to everyone on Los Angelesâ skid row by October.
Last month, the city and county of Los Angeles filed an appeal of a sweeping injunction from U.S. District Judge David O. Carter ordering urgent action to get people off skid row. In their appeal to the 9th Circuit, the city and county asked for the deadlines to be suspended while their appeal is heard.
The appellate court didnât grant that request outright. Instead, the panel of judges paused the order until June 15 and asked for more information on how granting the stay pending appeal sought by the city and county might affect the case before Carter.
Ninth Circuit eases path to citizenship for some children of naturalized U.S. citizens
FacebookTwitterEmail
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said U.S. residents who were under 18 when a 1952 law was in effect were eligible for citizenship through their parents, protecting them from deportation.Gabrielle Lurie/The Chronicle
With key votes from two appointees of former President Donald Trump, a federal appeals court eased the path to citizenship Thursday for some children of naturalized U.S. citizens, protecting the youths from deportation if they are later convicted of crimes.
The case before the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco involved the meaning of a former law that set conditions for immigrant children residing legally in the United States to become citizens after their parents obtain citizenship.