Biden judicial nominees represent diverse professional backgrounds, identities
Choudhury, who previously worked at the ACLU in New York, would be just the second Muslim-American federal judge after the Senate confirmed Zahid Quraishi – another Biden nominee – to the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey in June.
Sixty-two of Biden’s federal judiciary nominees have been women, including seven of the eight new nominees. The new group also includes two Black women, a Taiwanese immigrant, an Asian-American, a Latina and one nominee who identifies as Asian American, Latino and white. Three nominees are civil rights lawyers, two are labor lawyers and two public defenders.
Biden poised to double the number of Black women appeals court judges
Biden is also nominating Arianna Freeman, a federal public defender in Philadelphia, to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in Pennsylvania. Freeman is the eighth Black woman Biden has nominated as a federal appellate judge, matching the total number of Black women who have ever served as federal appellate judges. Freeman would become the first African-American woman to ever serve on the Third Circuit if confirmed.
In his first year in office, Biden won Senate confirmations of 41 of his federal judge nominees, the most of any president during their first 12 months since John F. Kennedy.
Twenty-four of Biden’s judicial nominees have been Black (29%), 17 have been Hispanic (20%) and 16 have been Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (19%).
Other new nominees are:
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