print-only banner
The White House Skip Main Navigation
  
In Focus
News
News by Date
Appointments
Federal Facts
West Wing

 Home > News & Policies > April 2002

For Immediate Release
Office of the Vice President
April 8, 2002

Vice President Speaks at Courthouse Groundbreaking
Remarks by the Vice President at the Groundbreaking Ceremony
for the E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse Annex
E. Barrett Prettyman U.S. Courthouse
Washington, D.C.

As Prepared for Delivery

Thank you very much. Mr. Chief Justice, Chief Judges Ginsburg and Hogan, Judges of the District and Circuit Courts, Mayor Williams, Delegate Norton, ladies and gentlemen: I'm delighted to join all of you in today's ceremony.

Usually when a crowd gathers outside this building, somebody's in trouble. Today is a happy exception. We're here to break ground on an annex to this fine old structure. The U.S. Courts building doesn't really stand out in the Washington landscape. It's not known for special style, or flair, or extravagance - nothing at all flashy about it. In short, the perfect place for a joint appearance by Dick Cheney and Bill Rehnquist.

The E. Barrett Prettyman Courthouse is named for one of many distinguished jurists to pass through here in a half-century. Others include David Bazelon, Burnita Matthews, Warren Burger, Barrington Parker Sr., Patricia Wald, Robert Bork, and current Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Those names represent varying judicial philosophies. Together they reflect a single standard of excellence and integrity that is maintained to this day.

Here, and in courthouses across America, federal judges go about the hard and serious work of delivering justice. I'm sure many of you will attest that the rewards do not come in wealth. For even the most experienced judge, the job requires daily discipline ... sustained concentration ...a searching mind ...an alert conscience. Judges are given a great deal of authority, and with it a great deal of responsibility. The highest rewards come in discharging that responsibility with honor, impartiality, and humanity. You do that job well, and you have the nation's gratitude.

The federal courts of the District of Columbia are among the most important in the land. And the trials and appeals conducted here are among the nation's highest-profile cases. By statute, appeals from many agency decisions are taken directly to this courthouse. And under a law signed by President Bush after the attacks of September 11, the D.C. Circuit will be the exclusive venue for appeals in certain matters involving alleged terrorists. The addition of new workspace here reminds us of the increasing demands on our federal judiciary, and of the enormous importance of its work to the country.

President Truman was at this site in 1950 as the cornerstone was laid. That afternoon he said, and I quote: "One of the most important duties of the President of the United States is to appoint Federal judges. I give that more thought, more care, and more deliberation than most any other thing I do in my duties."

President Bush views his responsibilities in the same way. Judicial nominees must be men and women of experience, meeting the highest standards of legal training, temperament, and judgment. They must respect the powers given them under the Constitution, and the limits of those powers. And they should be lawyers of skill, discernment, and high character.

Just under a year ago, the President announced his first nominees for the federal bench. Yet of these eleven men and women, only three have been given a hearing in the United States Senate. All of the others are still awaiting confirmation hearings, including two superbly qualified nominees for the D. C. Circuit, John Roberts and Miguel Estrada.

As we begin the work of expanding this building, it's worth remembering that a courthouse is not a court. Only judges make a court, and one-third of the seats on this Circuit Court are empty. For another court of appeals - the Sixth Circuit, covering Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky, and Tennessee - seven presidential nominees are still awaiting hearings. That court sits half empty, with eight active judges doing the work of sixteen. Nationwide, nearly a hundred district and circuit judgeships are unfilled, and 40 of them have been classified as judicial emergencies. The President is committed to filling them, and has submitted to the Senate the names of 98 nominees. Yet there are today more judicial vacancies than on the day we were inaugurated. The pace of attrition is actually faster than the pace of the Senate confirmation process.

The Senate's delays are causing a vacancy crisis, and are inexcusable - endangering the quality of justice in the federal courts. As a matter of respect for the judicial branch ... and courtesy to the executive branch ... and simple fairness to the nominees themselves, the Senate should do its duty, and give a prompt hearing and vote to every person selected for this and other courts. Perhaps this construction project, within sight of the Capitol, will stir the Senate, and cause new judges to arrive here. As a friend of mine said, "Maybe if you build it, they will come."

Every judge here today holds his or her post because that simple consideration was given to them. They have reflected credit on the Presidents of both parties who selected them, and on the senators of both parties who confirmed them. This morning I want to thank one in particular, Judge Harry Edwards, for his diligent efforts as chief judge in getting this building annex underway. In the years and decades to come, all who work here will follow in the finest of traditions. I am certain that the best legal talent America can produce will be collected here for as long these buildings stand.

Thank you very much.

###