The U.S. Senate voted 50–49 to confirm Emil Bove—a former Trump defense attorney and senior Justice Department official—to a lifetime seat on the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, which oversees cases from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware.
Despite fierce opposition from Democrats and two GOP moderates (Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski), Republicans advanced Bove’s nomination, citing his legal credentials and DOJ leadership experience. His confirmation restores a conservative majority to the Philadelphia-based bench.
Bove faced serious whistleblower allegations during his Senate hearings: critics accused him of advising junior attorneys to defy judicial orders on deportation policy, pressuring prosecutors to drop a corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, and dismissing prosecutors tied to January 6 investigations. Bove denied any wrongdoing and characterized the accusations as politically motivated.
Hundreds of former Justice Department prosecutors and over 75 retired judges voiced concern over what they described as Bove’s partisan alignment and presidential loyalty overshadowing judicial independence. Some demanded rejection of his nomination during the committee process.
Senate Judiciary members expressed deep concern over the rushed pace of the confirmation, with Democrats staging a walkout during the committee vote. Senator Dick Durbin and others warned that Bove’s appointment could represent a troubling precedent in politicizing the judiciary.
Still, Senate Republicans defended the process, with Chairman Chuck Grassley calling opposition “excessive rhetoric” and praising Bove as “diligent, capable, and fair.”
