ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. Lindsey Graham voted out dozens of President Trump's judicial nominees in his first act as the new chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

WASHINGTON ― It’s hard to keep up with everything going on in Washington, but if there’s one thing constantly humming along in the background, it’s the Republican effort to push through President Donald Trump’s judicial nominees. The Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to send 44 of Trump’s court picks to the Senate floor for a confirmation vote. That’s a huge number at once; progressive judicial advocacy groups dubbed the committee’s hearing a “monster markup.” Most of these nominees were introduced in the last Congress but didn’t get confirmed in time, so Republicans are expediting them in one big batch. Thursday’s action comes as Trump has already drastically reshaped federal courts. To date, he has seen 30 circuit judges, 53 district judges and two Supreme Court justices confirmed. That’s so many circuit judges ― more than any other president had confirmed by this point in his first term ― that 1 in 6 seats on the U.S. circuit courts are now filled by judges nominated by Trump. But Democrats and progressive groups aren’t just alarmed by the number of Trump’s picks sailing through. Many of these nominees have spent their careers attacking LGBTQ rights, abortion rights and voting rights, and now they’re on their way to holding lifetime seats on federal courts. As Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) pointed out in Thursday’s hearing, more than 80 percent of Trump’s judicial nominees so far are members of the conservative Federalist Society. For some context, she noted that less than 4 percent of all American lawyers are members of that group. “Month after month, we have seen a parade of these so-called conservative activists nominated to the federal courts,” Hirono said. “They have been groomed by conservative political ideologues. They want to see Roe v. Wade overturned or narrowed into oblivion, LGBT people permanently consigned to the margins of American life, and constitutional and civil rights encroached [based] on the religious preference of a vocal few.” This story would be pages long if we spelled out the records of all of the controversial nominees who just advanced, so here’s a sampling of the people drawing some of the fiercest criticism from civil and women’s rights groups. All of these nominees are likely to be confirmed given Republicans’ majority in the Senate.

Tom Williams via Getty Images Allison Jones Rushing

Allison Jones Rushing, nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit The 37-year-old attorney was a legal intern at the Alliance Defending Freedom, which the Southern Poverty Law Center has classified as a “hate group,” and mentored people through the organization’s controversial Blackstone Legal Fellowship program. As reported by Rewire in 2013, the Blackstone program focuses on “fighting for the criminalization of abortion; against the rights of LGBT people; for so-called religious liberty (which often comes in the form of defending clients who wish to discriminate against gay people based on their religious beliefs); and for organized Christian prayer in government or public school settings.” Rushing also argued in a 2013 panel discussion that there were “both moral and practical” reasons for creating the Defense of Marriage Act, the former federal law that banned same-sex marriage. She frequently referenced the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s dissent from the Supreme Court’s 2013 decision striking down part of DOMA that said it departed from “traditional” concepts of marriage and morality.

Tom Williams via Getty Images Eric D. Miller

Eric D. Miller, nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit The 43-year-old attorney has built a career out of fighting tribal interests and sovereignty, so much so that one Native American leader described Miller’s law firm, Perkins Coie, as the go-to destination for jurisdictions that want “to fight an Indian tribe.” Two prominent Native American organizations ― the National Congress of American Indians and the Native American Rights Fund ― wrote to Judiciary Committee leaders in August citing problems with Miller. “Our concern is that he chose to build a law practice on mounting repeated challenges to tribal sovereignty, lands, religious freedom, and the core attribute of federal recognition of tribal existence,” the letter says. “His advocacy has focused on undermining the rights of Indian tribes, often taking extreme positions and using pejorative language to denigrate tribal rights.” Their opposition to Miller is only the third time either group has opposed a federal judicial nominee.

C-SPAN Matthew Kacsmaryk

Matthew Kacsmaryk, nominee to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas The 42-year-old lawyer wrote approvingly in a 2015 op-ed that “the Catechism holds that ‘homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered,’ ‘contrary to the natural law,’ and ‘do not proceed from a genuine affective and sexual complementarity.’” In the fall of 2015, Kacsmaryk criticized the Supreme Court’s decision in favor of marriage equality, saying that the justices who ruled for it “found an unwritten ‘fundamental right’” hidden in the Constitution “so cleverly concealed ... that it took almost 150 years to find.” On abortion matters, Kacsmaryk fought to give pharmacists the right to deny emergency contraceptives to women. In a 2016 amicus brief filed with the Supreme Court, he wrote that a Washington state law requiring pharmacists either to fill a medical prescription or find an available pharmacist who will, which had been upheld by the 9th Circuit, “authorizes an unprecedented and dangerous intrusion on the most basic right of conscience.” The Supreme Court let the 9th Circuit decision stand.

ASSOCIATED PRESS Wendy Vitter

Wendy Vitter, nominee to the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana The 58-year-old attorney is a vocal opponent of abortion rights who initially didn’t tell senators about her extreme comments on the topic. “Planned Parenthood says they promote women’s health,” Vitter said in a May 2013 speech she gave in protest of a new clinic in New Orleans. “It is the saddest of ironies that they kill over 150,000 females a year. The first step in promoting women’s health is to let them live.” Ahead of her 2018 confirmation hearing, Vitter, whose husband is former Sen. David Vitter (R-La.), did not disclose to the committee that she had moderated a panel at a 2013 anti-abortion conference peddling false information about the dangers of abortion ― or that she urged audience members to tell their doctors to put materials in their waiting rooms claiming that abortions cause breast cancer, which is not true. Vice News later uncovered these missing materials.

C-SPAN Howard C. Nielson Jr.

ASSOCIATED PRESS Patrick Wyrick