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Schumer Re-Elected As Senate Democratic Leader

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OPINION: This article may contain commentary which reflects the author's opinion.


The question of who will be the party’s leader after the election is dividing Democrats across the country. However, they are mainly sticking with their current track in the U.S. Senate.

“I am honored and humbled to be chosen by my colleagues to continue leading Senate Democrats during this crucial period for our country.” Schumer said in a statement. “Republican colleagues should make no mistake about it, we will always stand up for our values. We have a lot of work ahead — in the Senate and as a country — and in this upcoming Congress, our caucus will continue to fight for what’s best for America’s working class.”

According to a Senate Democratic leadership aide, Senate Democrats elected leadership for their return to the minority at a closed-door party meeting on Tuesday, including selecting Sen. Chuck Schumer for a second term as caucus leader. Senator Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) was also elected to a second term as whip.

Two Democrats advanced in the rankings, with Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) securing the third position as chair of the Steering and Policy Committee. Klobuchar, the chair of the Democratic Steering and Outreach Committee and now ranked fourth in the Democratic leadership rankings, is taking a step forward.

Sen. Cory Booker, a New Jersey Democrat who ran for president in 2020 and has been in the Senate since 2013, will lead the Strategic Communications Committee.

According to the aide, every election was unanimous. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) is anticipated to be the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee’s chair, although the appointment has not yet been made public.

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“Schumer’s reelection as leader in particular signals trust from rank-and-file Democrats in their current leadership ranks. Despite a brutal November for the party writ large, Senate Democrats did win competitive races in Wisconsin, Michigan, Nevada and Arizona. They’re still publicly ambitious about their 2026 map and hopeful about their chances to take back the majority,” Politico reported.

“That positivity doesn’t extend party-wide. Multiple Democrats in the House are being challenged for ranking member seats. And Democratic pundits are still locked in a back-and-forth over what went wrong for the party which lost the House, Senate and presidency. Schumer himself has acknowledged the party needs to reflect on how it’s connected with voters and assess ways to adjust,” the outlet added.

Before President-elect Donald Trump takes office, President Joe Biden and his Democrat Party want to ram through as many judicial nominees as possible, but their plan will fail.

As Republicans prepared to slow down the Democrats’ appointing process, they reached a last-minute agreement to allow votes for a few district court judges, provided that the Democrats halted the votes for four higher-tier circuit court judicial nominees.

The deal will give the president-elect the ability to appoint and confirm four crucial appellate court judges and dozens more.

A spokeswoman for Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer spoke to Fox News that the trade included four circuit nominees that lack the votes to get confirmed—”for” more than triple the number of additional judges moving forward.”

“I’m glad that Republican senators are starting to show up to vote because some of the worst nominees are still awaiting confirmation precisely because they didn’t have adequate support,” JCN President Carrie Severino said to Fox News.

“When Trump comes into office, he’s going to have dozens more vacancies to fill,” she said. “And that’s not even counting the judges who will take senior status over the next four years.”

CAPAction senior director of courts and legal policy Devon Ombres said, “Frankly, I’m at a loss as to why they would get here.”

“It would be nice to see Democratic leadership and the White House try and push through and fill those vacancies where possible,” he said.

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Ombres predicted that circuit judges appointed mainly by former president George W. Bush would take senior status, giving the president-elect additional vacancies to fill. He also predicted that judges appointed by former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama would not take senior status.

“[Trump will] still have a handful of vacancies that he’ll be able to appoint,” he said. “However, if the Senate Republicans stick to the blue slip process, it will be more challenging to appoint candidates from blue states, but he will still have the chance to strengthen existing positions, particularly the 11th Circuit.”

The judges are anticipated to be voted on after the Thanksgiving break but just because there was a deal does not mean that Republicans will not fight the nominees being confirmed.

“I think certainly appellate judges are always going to be more important in our judicial system than district court judges,” the CAPAction senior director said. “But district court judges are still capable of instituting nationwide injunctions and striking down programs and issuing sweeping opinions.”

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