This is quite the conclusion to our the Senate's first post-Kavanaugh week in the Senate: On the heels of an unprecedented, pitched battle over the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, President Trump has unveiled a fresh roster of nominees to the federal judiciary. Things may be looking up for the GOP's Senate prospects, but the White House and Mitch McConnell aren't taking anything for granted. With the midterm election approaching, they're keeping the parade of confirmations flowing at an impressive clip. The latest:

JUST IN: White House announces Trump has five new appeals court nominees — for the 2nd and 9th circuits — and eight new district court nominees. pic.twitter.com/fDetXFRYdy — Chris Geidner (@chrisgeidner) October 11, 2018

President Donald Trump announced his eighteenth wave of judicial nominees Wednesday night, just four days after the Senate confirmed Justice Brett Kavanaugh to the U.S. Supreme Court. Wednesday’s nominees include two candidates for the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and three for the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The 2nd Circuit is based in New York City and has jurisdiction over New York, Connecticut and Vermont. The 9th Circuit is based in San Francisco, and hears appeals arising from nine western states as well as the outlying Pacific territories...Trump has struggled to secure confirmations to both courts...The package also includes eight nominees for trial courts in California, Nebraska, New York, Ohio and Tennessee.



The Senate may move on further judicial confirmations before the November elections. The Senate Judiciary Committee is poised to forward nine nominations to the full Senate for final confirmation on Thursday, and a confirmation hearing for lower court nominees is scheduled for Oct. 17. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will seek terms with Democrats to confirm a package of judges before the chamber adjourns for the midterms.

After going to the mat on Kavanaugh, and failing, are Democrats now resigned to capitulation, and eager to go home? It looks like that may be the case:

Democrats seem willing to swallow some more Trump judges next week so their people can get home to campaign

?@eschor? https://t.co/1A4HwabFlb — Burgess Everett (@burgessev) October 11, 2018

On Thursday, McConnell is expected to begin setting up votes on judges and executive branch nominees for next week, according to two GOP sources familiar with the leader's plans. And by calling up the judicial nominations now, McConnell will force Democrats to swallow more confirmations before their imperiled incumbents can leave Washington to campaign...[Democrats are] settling for a middle ground, with few committing to a full-on fight...Another Democratic senator said that "I think we will” take a deal on judges. “I think probably next week.” The Senate currently has 42 judicial nominees in the queue for floor votes, with nine more slated for Thursday consideration by the Judiciary panel. While it's unclear how many of those picks McConnell plans to seek a pre-election deal on with Schumer, the Kentucky Republican has underscored that he intends to follow his victory on Kavanaugh with more judicial confirmations before the midterms.

The piece quotes red state incumbents grousing about wanting to be home, with some attacking McConnell for keeping them in session during an election year summer. But their beef should be with their own party's deliberate obstructionism, for which McConnell is retaliating. Mess with McConnell, and he'll play hardball. Trump and McConnell have already achieved historic numbers as they exploit Democrats' previous power grabs to remake the federal courts. I'll leave you with an observation about Senate Democrats' abrupt heel turn on messaging and priorities:

.@AG_Conservative is correct. We went from “the next SCOTUS Justice is a gang raping date raping alcoholic” to “all that matters is Medicare for all ” in 3 days flat pic.twitter.com/sTHroLFWQr — Stephen Miller (@redsteeze) October 11, 2018



UPDATE - 15 judges confirmed. Mitch strikes again: