President Trump has nominated two women to serve as federal judges in New York City — including one who previously worked for now US Supreme Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh, the White House announced on Wednesday.

Trump has tapped Saritha Komatireddy, a federal prosecutor in the US Attorney’s Office in Brooklyn, to serve as judge in Brooklyn federal court. In 2009, she clerked for Kavanaugh when he was on the US Court of Appeals in Washington, DC.

Komatireddy offered an endorsement for Kavanaugh when he was first nominated to the Supreme Court, saying in a White House release: “I considered it a special privilege to train under a man who had such fundamental respect for the law and a complete commitment to getting it right.”

Her statement came months before Kavanaugh was accused of sexual misconduct as a teen. The allegations led to a contentious confirmation hearing, but he was ultimately cleared by the majority of senators.

Trump on Wednesday also nominated Jennifer Rearden — a partner at the big-time Manhattan firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher — to fill a vacancy on the bench in Manhattan federal court.

Rearden’s major clients included Verizon — in its court battle against Con Ed over a 2007 manhole explosion near Grand Central Terminal — and a coalition of community groups who successfully defeated a proposal to build a stadium for the Jets on Manhattan’s West Side.

If the Senate OKs both women, they will be the seventh and eighth Trump nominees serving in the three federal courts in New York City.

According to Ballotpedia, the Senate has confirmed 133 Trump picks for federal district courts. By Feb. 1 of his fourth year in office, President Barack Obama had appointed 98, while Persident George W. Bush had appointed 139 by that point in his tenure.

Komitareddy and Rearden did not immediately respond to requests for comment.