Biden delivers on threat to veto bill to expand U.S. judiciary
A once-widely-bipartisan bill that would have been the first significant expansion of the federal judiciary since 1990 was vetoed by President Joe Biden on Monday. The bill would have added 66 more judges to the nation's understaffed federal courts.
Many members of both parties initially backed the JUDGES Act, which would have added trial court judges to 25 federal district courts across 13 states, including California, Florida, and Texas, in six waves every two years until 2035.
In a rare move, hundreds of judges appointed by both party presidents openly endorsed the plan, claiming that since Congress last enacted legislation to fully expand the court, federal caseloads had swelled by more than 30%.
However, two days prior to the bill's passage in the Republican-controlled House of Repres...