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Helene White | |
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White in 2009 | |
Senior Judge of theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit | |
Assumed office June 13, 2022 | |
Judge of theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit | |
In office August 8, 2008 – June 13, 2022 | |
Appointed by | George W. Bush |
Preceded by | Susan Bieke Neilson |
Succeeded by | Stephanie D. Davis |
Personal details | |
Born | (1954-12-02)December 2, 1954 (age 70) New York City, New York, U.S. |
Political party | Democratic[1] |
Spouse | Charles Levin (divorced) |
Education | Columbia University (BA) University of Pennsylvania (JD) |
Helene N. White (born December 2, 1954) is aseniorUnited States circuit judge of theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Previously, she was a judge on theMichigan Court of Appeals.
Born inJackson Heights, Queens inNew York City, White graduated with aBachelor of Arts degree in economics fromBarnard College ofColumbia University in 1975 and theUniversity of Pennsylvania Law School with aJuris Doctor in 1978.[2] She then clerked for two years forMichigan Supreme Court JusticeCharles Levin, whom she would later marry and, in November 2006, divorce.[3] White then won an elected position on theDetroit Court of Common Pleas, and in 1982 was elected to theWayne County Circuit Court. White was elected to her position on theMichigan Court of Appeals in November 1992, and began serving in January 1993.
On January 7, 1997, PresidentBill Clinton nominated White to a vacancy on theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit that was vacated by JudgeDamon Keith, who assumedsenior status on May 1, 1995. With the United States Senate controlled by Republicans during Clinton's entire second term, White's nomination languished for more than four years, chiefly because of objections from Michigan's Republican senator at the time,Spencer Abraham.
Abraham had been angry with Clinton because Abraham previously had aided the president in getting three Democratic judicial nominees from Michigan approved in the Republican-controlled Senate, allegedly on the condition that Clinton make no more nominations to the federal courts from his state. When Clinton nominated White in 1997 contrary to the previous agreement, Abraham refused to approve her, keeping White's nomination stalled in theSenate Judiciary Committee without a hearing or committee vote. When Clinton later nominatedKathleen McCree Lewis in 1999 to a second Michigan vacancy on the Sixth Circuit, Abraham did not allow her to be processed in committee either.
Despite the delays, being picked to sit on a court just one notch below the U.S. Supreme Court "is like being hit by lightning," White told theDetroit News in an article that was published on October 17, 1999. "To say I'm going to pick up my jacks and go home is self-defeating. Why would I take them off the hook?" White acknowledged to the paper that she had considered withdrawing for "maybe 30 seconds." But at the time the article appeared, White told the paper she believed she would be given a fair hearing. "From everything I've heard, Sen. Abraham is a decent guy," White told the paper. "I have no reason to believe I won't get a hearing."
Ultimately, White's nomination was returned to the White House when Clinton's presidency ended. White's four year nomination remains one of the single longest federal appeals-court judicial nominations never given a full Senate vote, exceeded only by the failed nomination of Bush nomineeTerrence Boyle from 2001 to 2007.
When PresidentGeorge W. Bush took office in 2001, he quickly submitted Republican nominees to fill the two Michigan vacancies that Abraham had refused to allow Clinton to fill. However, Michigan's two Democratic senators,Carl Levin, who was the cousin of White's husband at the time, andDebbie Stabenow, who had defeated Abraham in the 2000 election, consistently tried to block all of Bush's circuit court nominees from Michigan, citing the fact that White and Lewis, the latter of whom eventually died in October 2007, had never received up-or-down votes from the Senate during Clinton's presidency. The two senators were successful in thefilibuster of Bush nomineeHenry Saad, who later withdrew. But as part of theGang of 14 deal in May 2005, they finally allowed the confirmation of stalled Bush nomineesDavid McKeague,Richard A. Griffin andSusan Bieke Neilson.
After Neilson's unexpected death in 2006 at the age of 49, there were again two Michigan vacancies on the Sixth Circuit. Bush quickly namedRaymond Kethledge andUnited States AttorneyStephen Murphy III to fill the positions. However, after the Democrats regained control of the Senate in November 2006, Levin and Stabenow once again balked at confirming any further Bush nominees from Michigan to the Sixth Circuit.
On April 15, 2008, as part of a deal with Levin and Stabenow, Bush reluctantly renominated White to the Sixth Circuit, more than eleven years after she was first nominated by Clinton. She replaced Murphy as the nominee to fill Neilson's vacated seat, while Murphy was given a Michigan district court nomination in exchange. In return for White's renomination, Levin and Stabenow agreed to allow Kethledge to be confirmed.
White, along with Kethledge and Murphy, received a hearing before theSenate Judiciary Committee on May 7, 2008, less than a month after her nomination. White was pointedly questioned by Republican senators, who were angry that her nomination had been fast-tracked by the Democratic committee chairman, SenatorPatrick Leahy, past several other Bush circuit court nominees who had been waiting in committee for much longer periods of time during the 110th Congress. She was voted out of committee on June 12, 2008 by an 11–8 vote. All of the Republicans on the committee, exceptOrrin Hatch, the chairman of the committee during the Clinton administration, voted against her purportedly on the grounds that she had not provided the committee with copies of her unpublished judicial opinions that were later reversed by theMichigan Supreme Court. On June 24, 2008, the Senate confirmed her by a 63–32 vote.[4] She received her commission on August 8, 2008.
On December 14, 2021, she announced her intent to assumesenior status upon confirmation of her successor.[5][6] She assumedsenior status on June 13, 2022 and was replaced byStephanie D. Davis.[7]
Legal offices | ||
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Preceded by | Judge of theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit 2008–2022 | Succeeded by |