
Trump seeks to reshape judiciary as first nominees face Senate
Trump's new judicial picks face Senate panel.
Nominees back abortion bans, oppose trans rights.
Trump dumps Federalist Society, wants loyal judges.
US President Donald Trump's first batch of judicial nominees since returning to the White House is set to go before a US Senate panel as the Republican looks to further reshape a judiciary whose members have stymied parts of his agenda.
Five of the 11 judicial nominees Trump has announced so far are slated to appear on Wednesday before the Republican-led US Senate Judiciary Committee, which will weigh whether to recommend them for the full Senate's consideration.
Those nominees all have conservative bona fides that their supporters say will help Trump shift the ideological balance of the judiciary further to the right after making 234 appointments in his first term, which was a near-record for a president's first four years in office.
Trump's first-term appointees included three members of the US Supreme Court, which since gaining a 6-3 conservative majority has curtailed abortion rights, rejected affirmative action policies on university campuses and limited the power of administrative agencies.
White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in a statement that Trump was committed to 'restoring integrity to the judicial system, which begins with appointing America First judges, not unelected politicians in robes.'
Among Wednesday's nominees is Whitney Hermandorfer, who as a lawyer serving under Tennessee's Republican attorney general has defended the state's abortion ban and challenged federal protections for transgender youth.
Hermandorfer, who is nominated to a seat on the Cincinnati-based 6th US Circuit Court of Appeals, will appear before the Senate panel with four nominees to fill trial court vacancies in Missouri.
Those include Joshua Divine, Missouri's solicitor general, who challenged Democratic former President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness efforts and has defended abortion and transgender healthcare restrictions.
The hearing comes days after Trump broke with conservative legal activist Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society, who advised Trump on judicial appointments in his first term.
Trump wrote:
I am so disappointed in The Federalist Society because of the bad advice they gave me on numerous judicial nominations.
'This is something that cannot be forgotten!'
Leo in response said he was grateful Trump transformed the courts. He said the judiciary 'is better than it's ever been in modern history, and that will be President Trump's most important legacy.'
Trump's attack on Leo came a day after a three-judge panel of the US Court of International Trade, including a Trump-appointed judge, blocked most of his tariffs. It is one of several rulings White House officials describe as part of a 'judicial coup' by judges who have blocked his policies.
Mike Davis, whose conservative Article III Project backs Trump's judicial nominees, said that in his second term Trump 'doesn't need to appease the DC establishment with weak and timid judges.'
'He is picking bold and fearless judges, like Emil Bove, who will follow the Constitution instead of seeking establishment favour.'
Bove, a Justice Department official who previously served as Trump's defence lawyer in the New York criminal trial over hush money paid to a porn star, was nominated last week to join the Philadelphia-based 3rd US Circuit Court of Appeals.
His nomination drew criticism from Democrats and Ed Whelan, a conservative legal commentator who in a piece in the National Review called Bove's nomination 'disturbing.'
Whelan said in an interview:
Clearly you have some folks agitating for MAGA-type nominees, and the White House will be open to those folks so long as they also have good legal qualifications.
But he said most of Trump's nominees, as well as candidates in the pipeline, have fit within the rubric of what Trump would have sought in his first term.
'It's going to be very hard for Trump to pick people other than people with traditional conservative qualifications,' Whelan said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
DoubleLine's Gundlach Says ‘Reckoning Is Coming' for US Debt
(Bloomberg) -- America's debt burden and interest expense have become 'untenable,' a situation that may lead investors to move out of dollar-based assets, according to DoubleLine Capital's Jeffrey Gundlach. Shuttered NY College Has Alumni Fighting Over Its Future Trump's Military Parade Has Washington Bracing for Tanks and Weaponry NYC Renters Brace for Price Hikes After Broker-Fee Ban NY Long Island Rail Service Resumes After Grand Central Fire Do World's Fairs Still Matter? 'There's an awareness now that the long-term Treasury bond is not a legitimate flight-to-quality asset,' the veteran bond manager said Wednesday in an interview at the Bloomberg Global Credit Forum in Los Angeles. A 'reckoning is coming.' In a wide-ranging discussion that also touched on gold's attractiveness, stretched market valuations, the state of private credit, artificial intelligence and long-term investment opportunities in India, Gundlach said investors should consider increasing their non-dollar-based holdings, adding that his firm was starting to introduce foreign currencies into its funds. His comments came a day before a closely watched auction for 30-year Treasury bonds. Gundlach, 65, likened today's market to the environment in 1999, just before the dot-com bust, as well as 2006 and 2007 before the global financial crisis. Going further, he said the booming private credit sector is analogous to the market for collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, in the mid-2000s, 'where there's just tremendous issuance, there's tremendous acceptance.' The investor noted that public credit markets have outperformed their private counterparts in recent months, and sees 'overinvestment' — and a risk of forced selling — in the latter. 'I just don't think the excess reward is anything close to what it used to be,' Gundlach said. He cited possible selling of private assets by US institutions such as Harvard University, which has explored offloading part of its endowment's private equity holdings as the Trump administration cuts off grants and funding. Gundlach founded DoubleLine in 2009 after a contentious exit from TCW, where he'd become a star bond manager. DoubleLine managed $93 billion in assets and had more than 250 employees as of March. The firm and its founder haven't shied away from bold takes. Gundlach, who called Donald Trump's first presidential win in 2016, gave the Federal Reserve an F grade in September for its response to the economy as he correctly predicted a half-point rate cut, and earlier this year the firm posed an open question of whether Microsoft Corp. debt was safer than Treasuries. Next Stop 6%? As for Treasury debt, Gundlach said yields on long-term bonds could continue to rise as the economy starts to weaken. If yields reached 6%, that could prompt the Federal Reserve to step in and start quantitative easing, buying long-term Treasuries to rein in borrowing costs. DoubleLine and peers including Pacific Investment Management Co. and TCW Group Inc. have been avoiding the longest-dated US government bonds in favor of shorter maturities that carry less interest-rate risk in the face of spiraling federal debt and deficits. US 30-year yields touched a near two-decade high of 5.15% last month, and traded at around 4.9% on Thursday. In a telling sign, yields on the long-term benchmark are higher year to date, even as rates on shorter-term Treasuries have fallen. While known for his fixed-income calls, Gundlach has grown more bullish on gold, doubling down on its status as a 'real asset class' and one that is 'no longer for lunatic survivalists' and speculators. 'We have a tremendous paradigm shift where money is not coming into the United States, and gold is suddenly the flight to quality asset,' he said. Gundlach previously predicted that the price of gold would shatter records, as happened this year, and in May, he told CNBC that the precious metal could swell to $4,000 per ounce, up from about $3,350 now. He also pointed to India as one of the 'most bankable' long-term investment opportunities. 'The way to invest in periods like this is to go with long-term themes,' Gundlach said. 'It might take 30 years, but you should invest in India because it has a similar profile today that China had 35 years ago.' --With assistance from Elizabeth Campbell, Loukia Gyftopoulou and Michael Mackenzie. (Adds the 30-year Treasury auction in the third paragraph.) New Grads Join Worst Entry-Level Job Market in Years American Mid: Hampton Inn's Good-Enough Formula for World Domination The Spying Scandal Rocking the World of HR Software The SEC Pinned Its Hack on a Few Hapless Day Traders. The Full Story Is Far More Troubling Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Washington Post
24 minutes ago
- Washington Post
UN nuclear watchdog's board of governors finds Iran isn't complying with its nuclear obligations
VIENNA — The U.N. nuclear watchdog's board of governors on Thursday formally found that Iran isn't complying with its nuclear obligations for the first time in 20 years, a move that could lead to further tensions and set in motion an effort to restore United Nations sanctions on Tehran later this year. Nineteen countries on the International Atomic Energy Agency's board, which represents the agency's member nations, voted for the resolution, according to diplomats who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the outcome of the closed-doors vote. Russia, China and Burkina Faso opposed it, 11 abstained and two did not vote. In the draft resolution seen by The Associated Press, the board of governors renews a call on Iran to provide answers 'without delay' in a long-running investigation into uranium traces found at several locations that Tehran has failed to declare as nuclear sites. Western officials suspect that the uranium traces could provide evidence that Iran had a secret nuclear weapons program until 2003. The resolution was put forward by France, the U.K., Germany and the United States. Iran's government did not immediately respond to the vote, though it has threatened to retaliate immediately. 'Iran's many failures to uphold its obligations since 2019 to provide the Agency with full and timely cooperation regarding undeclared nuclear material and activities at multiple undeclared locations in Iran ... constitutes non-compliance with its obligations under its Safeguards Agreement,' the draft resolution says. Under the so-called safeguards obligations, which are part of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty , Iran is legally bound to declare all nuclear material and activities and allow IAEA inspectors to verify that none of it is being diverted from peaceful uses. The draft resolution also finds that the IAEA's 'inability ... to provide assurance that Iran's nuclear program is exclusively peaceful gives rise to questions that are within the competence of the United Nations Security Council, as the organ bearing the main responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security.' The vote comes at a sensitive time as tensions in the region have been rising, with the U.S. State Department announcing on Wednesday that it is drawing down the presence of people who are not deemed essential to operations in the Middle East. It also comes as the U.S. and Iran have been holding talks on Tehran's rapidly advancing nuclear program. Oman's foreign minister said earlier Thursday that a sixth round of negotiations will be held in his country on Sunday. The draft resolution makes a direct reference to the U.S.-Iran talks, stressing its 'support for a diplomatic solution to the problems posed by the Iranian nuclear program, including the talks between the United States and Iran, leading to an agreement that addresses all international concerns related to Iran's nuclear activities, encouraging all parties to constructively engage in diplomacy.'
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tencent Said to Study Deal for $15 Billion Game Developer Nexon
(Bloomberg) -- Tencent Holdings Ltd. is studying a potential deal for Nexon Co., as the Chinese internet giant looks for ways to bolster its lucrative gaming operations, people with knowledge of the matter said. Shuttered NY College Has Alumni Fighting Over Its Future Trump's Military Parade Has Washington Bracing for Tanks and Weaponry NYC Renters Brace for Price Hikes After Broker-Fee Ban NY Long Island Rail Service Resumes After Grand Central Fire Do World's Fairs Still Matter? Shenzhen-based Tencent has reached out to the family of Nexon's late founder Kim Jung-ju to discuss the possibility of an acquisition, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. Kim's family has been speaking to advisers and evaluating options, according to the people. Kim's relatives hold their stake through family investment firm NXC Corp., which — together with affiliated unit NXMH BV — owned 44.4% of Nexon as of June 30, according to Nexon's interim report. Kim's wife and daughters own about 67.6% of NXC. It's unclear how receptive NXC is to a sale of the Nexon holding, and there's no certainty Tencent's deliberations will lead to a transaction, the people said. The structure of any deal hasn't been finalized, they added. A representative for Tencent didn't respond to a request seeking comment, while Nexon and NXC declined to comment. The move comes as Tencent, which already pursued an acquisition of Nexon in 2019, makes fresh forays into other South Korean assets. A subsidiary agreed to buy a nearly 10% stake in Seoul-based music producer SM Entertainment Co. in late May, just as an unofficial ban on K-pop in mainland China wanes. Known for role-playing games like MapleStory, Nexon was founded in South Korea in 1994 and listed in Japan in 2011, in one of the biggest tech-related initial public offerings at the time. Nexon shares have climbed more than 10% in Tokyo trading this year, giving the company a market value of about $15 billion. Changes in the shareholding structure after Kim's death in 2022 could complicate any deal. Family members handed the Korean government a stake in the NXC holding company in 2023 to settle an inheritance tax bill. Kim's wife and two daughters inherited his stake in NXC after he died in Hawaii. The family also sold treasury shares in NXC back to the holding company for 650 billion won ($478 million) in August. The Korean government has sought to sell its holding but failed to find a suitor, local media reported. Shares of rival game developers like Ubisoft Entertainment SA, GungHo Online Entertainment Inc. and Sega Sammy Holdings Inc. have declined this year. While Nexon shares are up in 2025, they're nearly 30% off a peak in 2021. NXC explored a sale of its Nexon stake six years ago, attracting interest from Tencent as well as buyout firms such as KKR & Co. and Hillhouse. The sale process was eventually shelved because of a failure to agree on price, Bloomberg News reported at the time. Nexon and Tencent have already worked together, developing Dungeon & Fighter, a key revenue generator. In March, Tencent agreed to invest €1.16 billion ($1.3 billion) for a 25% stake in a new Ubisoft unit that holds the rights to intellectual properties including Assassin's Creed. Nexon's first-quarter net sales totaled about ¥114 billion, while net income was ¥26 billion. --With assistance from Sohee Kim and Zheping Huang. New Grads Join Worst Entry-Level Job Market in Years American Mid: Hampton Inn's Good-Enough Formula for World Domination The Spying Scandal Rocking the World of HR Software The SEC Pinned Its Hack on a Few Hapless Day Traders. The Full Story Is Far More Troubling Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.