The change does not apply to cabinet secretaries and judicial nominees
In a single action, Senate Republicans confirmed more than 100 of President Donald Trump’s nominees, reducing the backlog of unfilled appointments. The Senate GOP altered its regulations to allow the majority of executive branch nominees to be approved collectively rather than individually, which led to the confirmations. The change does not apply to cabinet secretaries and judicial nominees. Since the rule change went into force, this move marks the biggest block of confirmations. Former Republican Senate candidate Herschel Walker, who will represent the Bahamas, and former White House Presidential Personnel Office director Sergio Gor, who will represent India, were among those authorized. Following months of Democratic resistance that had delayed the confirmation process to a standstill, Republicans invoked the so-called “nuclear option”—a party-line rules change—to expedite it. For a brief period, some Republicans thought about permitting President Trump to nominate people during the break, which would allow him to fill positions while the Senate was not in session. But in the end, GOP leaders turned down that notion, claiming it might backfire when their party is next in the minority. As his administration continues to fill important positions throughout the federal government amid a persistent partisan impasse, the mass confirmation represents a significant success for Trump. Senate Republicans considered amending the chamber’s confirmation procedure in September because they were dealing with a backlog of judicial nominations brought on by minority Democrats’ stalling tactics.
Recently, President Trump has named four new federal district court judges. Two of them are top prosecutors in Texas who he praised for following his strict immigration policies in their cases. In a series of social media posts late on Wednesday, Trump announced the four nominees from Florida, Ohio, and Texas. This is part of his ongoing effort to strengthen conservative influence on the federal judiciary, which had already shifted sharply to the right during his first term. The nominees are Acting U.S. Attorney John Marck of the Southern District of Texas and his No. 2, Arthur “Rob” Jones. The president chose them to be judges for life in their district, which includes Houston. It was the most recent time that Trump used prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney’s Office to fill open positions in the district. The Republican-controlled Senate confirmed Nicholas Ganjei, the district’s previous top federal prosecutor, to a judgeship in February. This made Marck the acting U.S. attorney. The office has been an important part of Operation Take Back America, a U.S. Department of Justice program that started in 2025 to stop illegal immigration and drug cartels. Last Friday, Marck said that his office had charged 440 people with immigration and border security crimes in just the last full week of March.
The nominees are Acting U.S
Trump similarly hailed Jones, the executive assistant U.S
“As Acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Texas, John has worked tirelessly to help us deport Criminal Illegal Immigrants and stop the trafficking of Lethal Drugs ravaging our Communities,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social. Trump similarly hailed Jones, the executive assistant U.S. attorney, saying he has “fought tirelessly to stop the flow of Illicit Drugs into our Country.” Jones started his career in 2002 as a line prosecutor in Laredo, focusing on border-related crime. To fill a vacancy in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, Trump nominated Mike Hendershot, who serves as chief deputy solicitor general under Republican Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost. Trump said that Hendershot “has strongly and successfully represented Ohio in Election Law cases and challenged the Radical Left Policies of the Obama and Biden Administrations.” Trump also picked Chief Judge Jeffrey Kuntz of Florida’s Fourth District Court of Appeal to be a federal judge in the Southern District of Florida.
