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President Trump has appointed 34 federal judges through April 1 of his second year of his second term


President Donald Trump (R) has appointed, and the Senate has confirmed, 34 Article III federal judges through April 1 of the second year of his second term in office. This is the third-most Article III judicial appointments through this point in all presidents’ second terms since President Bill Clinton (D). The average number of federal judges appointed by previous presidents through April 1 of the second year of their second term is 44.

By April 1 of the second year of his second term, President Barack Obama (D) had the most appointees confirmed with 64, and President George W. Bush (R) had the fewest confirmations with 29.

The only president to have appointed a Supreme Court justice by this point of his second term was George W. Bush, who appointed two.

The median number of U.S. Court of Appeals appointees is nine. Obama appointed the most with 14, and Trump appointed the fewest with six.

The median number of U.S. District Court appointees is 33.Obama appointed the most with 48, and W. Bush appointed the fewest with 19.

Article III federal judges are appointed for life terms by the president of the United States and confirmed by the U.S. Senate under Article III of the United States Constitution. They include judges on the U.S. Supreme Court, U.S. courts of appeal, U.S. district courts, and the U.S. Court of International Trade.

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