I know I’m just tilting at windmills here, but I continue to be somewhat amazed that Thomas Griffith’s judicial nomination was not a bigger deal. Today, he was confirmed rather easily.
The Senate on Tuesday confirmed one of its former lawyers, Thomas S. Griffith, to sit on the U.S. Appeals Court, the sixth judge it has elevated to the federal appellate court in the last month.
With a 73-24 vote, Griffith becomes the newest judge on the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal for the District of Columbia, taking a seat that the Bush administration originally wanted for filibustered Hispanic lawyer Miguel Estrada.
Estrada dropped out in September 2003 after being blocked by Democrats and President Bush replaced him in June 2004 with Griffith, who was the chamber’s general counsel during President Clinton’s impeachment before joining Brigham Young University as general counsel in 2003.
Let’s not lose sight of some of the details here. Griffith practiced law without a license in Utah for nearly five years, lost his D.C. law license, and passed up 10 opportunities to take the Utah bar exam. (Practicing law without a license is illegal.) Better yet, the American Bar Association gave Griffith the lowest possible passing grade for a judicial nominee. Just last fall, Pat Leahy saw this nomination going nowhere.
“This is a man who practiced law in two states in violation of the laws — what a fine, fine standard the White House has” for judicial nominees, Leahy said. “In my state he would be prosecuted. I’ve never seen anything so unbelievable.”
Yet, here we are, less than a year later, and Griffith has taken his lifetime seat on the second highest court in the judiciary. What’s more, the vote wasn’t even close.