President Trump says one of the signature achievements of his first 100 days was the appointment of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court. Now he's poised to continue the theme with the announcement of 10 nominees to lower federal courts, chosen with the help of the conservative Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation, per the New York Times. Here's a look at coverage:
- The announcement was expected as early as Monday, with a similar batch of nominees to follow pretty much monthly for the near future, reports the Times' Adam Liptak. He notes that two of the names come from Trump's Supreme Court short list: Michigan Supreme Court Justice Joan Larsen, who clerked for Antonin Scalia, and Minnesota Supreme Court Justice David Stras, who clerked for Clarence Thomas. The story lists the other eight as well.
- Larsen or Stras could yet end up on the Supreme Court, notes a post at the Weekly Standard, given that federal appeals courts are a "farm system" of sorts for the higher court. That's where eight of the nine current justices came from.
- Conservative columnist Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western law school, runs through the names and concludes in the Washington Post that it's "as strong a list of nominees as one could hope for."