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Union Pacific, Norfolk Southern discuss merger to create transcontinental railroad

File photo (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern are in merger talks to create the largest railroad in North America that would connect the East and West Coasts.

The merger discussions began during the first quarter of this year, according to a person familiar with the talks who isn’t authorized to discuss them publicly. It would combine the largest and smallest of the country’s six major freight railroads.

Both railroads declined to comment.

Within the industry there is widespread debate over whether such a merger would be approved by the Surface Transportation Board even though those regulators approved the deal that created CPKC railroad two years ago with the Canadian Pacific’s $31 billion acquisition of Kansas City Southern railroad.

That merger combined the two smallest major railroads in North America and left only six major freight railroads. But it was the first major rail merger approved in more than two decades.

The bar for railroad mergers in the U.S. was raised substantially at the start of the century after a disastrous combination of Union Pacific and Southern Pacific in 1996 that snarled rail traffic for an extended period, followed by the 1999 split of Conrail between Norfolk Southern and CSX, which created backups in the East.

To be approved, any major rail merger must show it will enhance competition and serve the public interest under the 2001 rules. The CPKC merger was not judged under those rules because Kansas City Southern had an exemption from them as the smallest major freight railroad at the time.

Union Pacific CEO Jim Vena talked earlier this year about the potential benefits of such a merger because it would streamline deliveries all across the country by eliminating the delays that come along with one railroad handing shipments over to another. Plus it would simplify shipping for the companies that rely on railroads to deliver their raw materials and finished products.

But in the past, some shippers have raised concerns about the consequences of being left with even fewer options to ship their goods because the major railroads are already so powerful.

Some investors have long argued that the industry should eventually consolidate down to two East-West railroads crossing the United States alongside the two railroads that already cross Canada. But regulators have been skeptical and taken a cautious approach. Any proposed deal would face a lengthy STB review. That board is currently evenly split between two Republicans and two Democrats with one seat open.

Citi Research analyst Ariel Rosa said in a research note that a major transcontinental railroad merger “would likely prove costly and time consuming, risking a years-long distraction to management, while facing significant pushback from regulators, politicians, employee unions, competitors, customers, and other stakeholders.”

Union Pacific, which is based in Omaha, Nebraska, generated $24.3 billion revenue last year as its more than 30.000 employees delivered freight all across the western United States. Norfolk Southern reported $12.1 billion revenue and has roughly 20,000 employees and its headquarters is in Atlanta.

Norfolk Southern stock gained 3.7% during the day Thursday and rose another 4.7% to hit $282.50 in after-market trading following the Journal’s story.

Gridiron Preview: Commerce Tigers

The Tigers are the most historic team in the state, and enter their 100th year with high expectations, with a new coaching staff led by a state championship coach in Lenny Gregory, and a new offense (spread) that is unprecedented for the Tigers. The bar is high, and this young group is aiming to launch above it.

Head Coach: Lenny Gregory (1st Season)
2024 Record: 8-4; State Rnd 2

“It’s Commerce,” says coach Lenny Gregory. “The expectations and standards are very high. Anything less than exceptional won’t cut it. Everyone these days is chasing a state championship, and the Tigers will also.”

2025 SCHEDULE – COMMERCE

Personnel & Schemes

Key Departures: Jaiden Daniels, Tysean Wiggins, Jermiah Mintz, Jacari Huff, Mac Mullis, Michael Duncan, Braxton Epps

Returning Starters: 1 on offense; 3 on defense

Key Returning Players: Ty Sorrells (WR/DB), Jace Lyle (RB/DB), Caden McWilliams (LB), Jude Forrester (OL/DL)

Up & Coming Players: Layden Bryson (JR QB transfer from Athens Christian), Esssien Lockleer, Demarco Huff, Zymir Huff, Jeremiah Jarrells

“Demarco might be the best 9th-grader I’ve ever coached,” says Gregory.

Offense: Spread
Layden Bryson is an experienced QB and will lead Commerce into a new offense. He will have Jace Lyle and Demarco Huff in the backfield to tote the rock, and Ty Sorrells, Essien Lockleer, and Brennan Griffith will lead the receiving room, along with Jeremiah Jarrells.

“I was told it would be tough to get Commerce to pass and catch, but it’s been quite the opposite,” says Gregory. “We have very explosive and athletic kids, and it’s been a great summer adjusting to the new look. We’ve been doing the 7-on-7s, finishing in the Final 4 at Auburn and in the Corky Kell.”

Defense: 3-4
“Caden McWilliams is the heartbeat of the defense,” says Gregory. “He’s our main edge rusher from the OLB position. Jeremiah Jarrells and Jace Lyle will lead the secondary. We’ve got a lot of athletic guys that are really intelligent on that side of the ball.”

Trenches: “Jude Forrester will anchor the lines as the returning starter,” adds Gregory. “Jackson Brown is another key guy in the trenches. Outside of being young, these are tough, coachable guys. On the D-line, Bronc Cash (SO) will be a really good player as well.”

Strengths & Areas of Focus

Strengths: Skill position players
“A lot of talent here, and what we do is try to fit what we do to the skillsets of our players,” adds Gregory.

Focusing On: “Youth is our biggest hurdle,” admits Gregory. “We lost a great senior class. We’ll start lots of sophomores and juniors. We are just really young.”

SEC coaches and players defend their dominance amid Big Ten’s recent success

FILE - Ohio State quarterback Will Howard (18) runs against Texas during the second half of the Cotton Bowl College Football Playoff semifinal game, Jan. 10, 2025, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)

ATLANTA (AP) — There was not a Big Ten player, coach or fan was in sight this week as the College Football Hall of Fame hosted SEC Media Days. Still, the SEC’s No. 1 rival found its way into conversations all week long.

It’s no secret the rivalry has intensified in recent years. Over the last decade, the SEC has won six of the 10 national championships. Two were won by Clemson in that stretch but the last two were won by Big Ten rivals, Michigan last year and Ohio State in January.

The recent success has put a dent in the SEC’s reputation as the nation’s dominant conference. SEC coaches, players and Commissioner Greg Sankey have no question they’re still No. 1.

“For all those of you who like to speculate about super-conferences, welcome to one,” Sankey said to open this week’s event. “We have common-sense geography, restored rivalries, record-breaking viewership. If you take the consumed viewership hours on linear TV, almost 40% of that viewership was focused on games involving Southeastern Conference universities and teams. Big Ten was next, right around 30%.”

The SEC also boasted 79 NFL draft picks in 2025, more than any other conference and beating the Big Ten by eight.

No one put it more plainly this week than Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz when asked if he thought the SEC was the top conference in college football.

“The top? The top, as in number of draft picks in the NFL? Top as in most viewership? Overall top, deepest conference in college football? Look, the more teams you add to the tournament, there’s greater variance to it,” Drinkwitz said. “You’ve got 16 of the toughest competitors in the world who are head coaches in this league. We’re all driven to achieve the best, whether that’s internally or externally.”

The Big Ten and SEC draw outsized attention in college football for other reasons. The two will soon have a bigger say over the format of the College Football Playoff — they currently differ on that — and their teams are in the mix for the top recruits every year.

Early bragging rights this season between the two behemoths include Texas at Ohio State in a CFP rematch from last season, Michigan at Oklahoma and Wisconsin at Alabama, all before mid-September. The real measuring stick in this league rivalry is always going to be the postseason.

Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer knows excellence is the expectation when it comes to SEC football.

“That’s our responsibility, to be at the top, right? That’s the expectation. I know at Alabama, but also the expectation for the SEC as a whole. I still feel that the SEC top to bottom is as strong as you’ll find,” DeBoer said.

DeBoer isn’t wrong when he says it’s the expectation. In fact, it’s the standard and fan bases from Austin to Gainesville go beyond team cheers on game day. “S-E-C, S-E-C” chants on a fall Saturday are not a rare occurrence.

The excitement is part of what drew Cam Ball to Arkansas.

“Growing up, my father would wake me up on Saturdays. If we didn’t go to the barber shop, we was at home, just sitting on the couch watching the game, mainly watching SEC games,” he said.

Playing in the conference he grew up watching still feels surreal.

“Sometimes in a game, it’s the first play, and I’ll just look up and see an SEC opponent’s helmet, and I’ll be like, ‘Wow, I’m really here. God is good.’ This conference in general, it’s just a blessing to be here,” Ball said.

Alex Afari Jr.’s recruiting journey ended promptly after receiving the call from Kentucky. It was his first and only SEC offer. The decision was easy: Who wouldn’t want to play SEC ball?

“Playing in the SEC means a lot,” Afari said. “I always want to play against the best players. When I got the SEC offer and that’s my only one — I had like Big Ten offers or whatever, but this is my only SEC offer, and I took that chance.”

To Afari, no other conference compares.

“It’s not even close, really. I feel like we just got the o-linemen, the d-linemen are just different, the skill players as well. We put the most players in the NFL,” he said. “Every SEC team can beat each other, every SEC team is not weak, so I feel like that’s the difference. We don’t have any bad teams in the SEC.”

Jesse “Harlon” King

Jesse “Harlon” King, age 75, of Macon, formerly of Alto, passed away on Wednesday, July 16, 2025.

Born on October 22, 1949, in Habersham County, he was a son of the late James Amos and Henrietta Wiley King. Harlon worked with Maxwell Grave Service for a number of years. He enjoyed farm life and was especially fond of animals and diet Mountain Dew. He was of the Baptist faith.

In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother, Reece Lee King.

Survivors include his brothers, Baxter, Dexter, and Robert King; sisters and brothers-in-law, Sara Canup (Gary) and Ann Youngblood (Scott); several nieces and nephews; and a special aunt, Gervis Taylor.

Funeral services are 4 pm on Saturday, July 19, 2025, in the Chapel of McGahee-Griffin & McEntire, with Rev. Wes King officiating. Interment will follow the service in Mt. Zion Methodist Church Cemetery.

The family will receive friends from 2 pm until the service hour on Saturday, at the funeral home.

An online guest register is available and may be viewed at www.mcgaheegriffinandmcentire.com.

McGahee-Griffin & McEntire Funeral Home of Cornelia, Georgia (706/778-8668) is in charge of arrangements.

Over 150 gather in Athens to honor John Lewis with protest

Protesters line Alps Road in Athens for the Good Trouble Lives On rally, protesting Trump administration immigration policies and funding cuts. The event commemorated the anniversary of the death of the late Civil Rights leader and Georgia Congressman, John Lewis. (Emma Auer/WUGA)

Over 150 people gathered in Athens for a protest to commemorate the late Congressman John Lewis on Thursday, one of the many events being held across the state.

The protest was one of several nationwide as part of the Good Trouble Lives On National Day of Action. It borrowed from the famous words of late Georgia Congressman and Civil Rights icon John Lewis, who died in 2020.

Protestor Gloria Heard joined the crowd for one reason – “For good trouble,” she said.

(Emma Auer/WUGA)

The protestors lined the busy commercial corridor of Alps Road with posters critical of President Donald Trump’s administration.

Michael Call said he wanted to attend the event to honor Congressman Lewis. “I was a little boy when I first saw him. The way he spoke, it inspired me to always keep up the fight. He never did sit down. Having him as that leader made me want to do more and continue to do more,” he said.

No counter protesters attended the event.

A candlelight march and reading ‘Good Trouble Lives On’ event is set to take place at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, July 17, at Roosevelt Square in Gainesville.

Both events are part of a nationwide movement inspired by Lewis’s lifelong commitment to nonviolent resistance. Over 1,600 Good Trouble Lives On rallies have been planned across the country.

Trump has ‘benign’ vein condition; bruised hand blamed on handshaking, aspirin

President Donald Trump sits with his hands interlocked as he and Bahrain's Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa speak in the Oval Office of the White House, Wednesday, July 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — President Donald Trump has been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, the White House announced Thursday.

The condition is “benign and common” for people above age 70, U.S. Navy Capt. Sean Barbabella, the president’s physician, wrote in a memo regarding the president’s health.

The 79-year-old president underwent a “comprehensive examination, including diagnostic vascular studies,” after he noticed mild swelling in his lower legs, the memo said.

The condition happens when veins in the leg struggle to get blood to flow back to the heart, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

In the memo, Barbabella specified that “there was no evidence of deep vein thrombosis (DVT) or arterial disease,” and results from lab testing “were within normal limits.” Trump also underwent an echocardiogram, in which “no signs of heart failure, renal impairment, or systemic illness were identified.”

The White House Office of Communications released a letter from President Donald Trump’s physician on July 17, 2025.

Barbabella also elaborated on recent photographs depicting minor bruising on the back of the president’s hand, saying “this is consistent with minor soft tissue irritation from frequent handshaking and the use of aspirin, which is taken as part of a standard cardiovascular prevention regimen.”

The physician noted that “President Trump remains in excellent health.” The memo did not detail any methods for treatment.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, who read aloud the physician’s note at a Thursday briefing, said the mild swelling in Trump’s legs is not causing him any discomfort.

“No discomfort from the president at all, and you probably all see that on a day-to-day basis, he’s working around the clock,” she said.

‘Good Trouble Lives On’ rally this evening in Gainesville

A mural in downtown Atlanta has become a makeshift tribute to Congressman John Lewis, who died Friday. (Jill Nolin/Georgia Recorder)

A candlelight march and reading event called Good Trouble Lives On is set to take place on Thursday, July 17, at Roosevelt Square in Gainesville, marking the anniversary of Congressman John Lewis’s passing and renewing a call to defend civil and human rights through nonviolent action.

The event, sponsored by Indivisible Hall, is part of a nationwide movement inspired by Lewis’s lifelong commitment to nonviolent resistance. Over 1,600 Good Trouble Lives On rallies have been planned across the country.

Organizers want “gentle showing”

Organizer Dallas Thompson expects around 200 people to attend the Gainesville rally. Thompson was also an organizer for the No Kings protest in Poultry Park last month.

“We are excited about this protest because it’s about passing on the light,” she said. “It’s not just about protesting or standing up for what is right. It’s about spreading the good.”

The gathering begins at 7:30 p.m. at Roosevelt Square with a series of readings from John Lewis, fellow civil rights leaders, and advocates for democracy. Afterward, attendees will march to the pedestrian bridge over Jesse Jewell Parkway, where they will hold a candlelight vigil and sing freedom songs in unison.

“It will be a gentle showing,” Thompson said “We want our voices to be heard and we want people to see that we’re there in numbers.”

Participants are encouraged to join in the spirit of Lewis’ “Good Trouble” by upholding nonviolence and de-escalation throughout the evening. Organizers emphasize that candles will be provided, though LED candles are welcome.

The Good Trouble Lives On rally is open to all and intended to unite people across backgrounds in defense of voting rights and personal freedoms. It directly responds to legislation such as the SAVE Act and broader concerns about the criminalization of protest and political dissent.

“This is more than a protest,” the event page states. “It’s a continuation of the movement Lewis helped lead, and a new front in the struggle for freedom.”

To sign up for the event, visit the event page.

Kemp appoints Judge Benjamin Land to Georgia Supreme Court

(Photo courtesy Georgia Court of Appeals)

Judge Benjamin A. Land, a veteran jurist with decades of legal and judicial experience, has been appointed to the Georgia Supreme Court. Gov. Brian Kemp announced Land’s appointment Thursday to fill the vacancy left by the retirement of former Chief Justice Michael Boggs.

“After careful consideration of multiple accomplished and noteworthy candidates, I’m proud to announce Ben Land as my appointment to serve on the Georgia Supreme Court,” Kemp said Thursday. “Judge Land has earned the respect of his peers and hardworking Georgians through his commitment to fairness and impartiality, his strong work ethic, and his integrity.”

Land has served on the Georgia Court of Appeals since July 2022 and was elected to a full six-year term in 2024. Before that, he served as a superior court judge in the Chattahoochee Judicial Circuit, appointed by former Gov. Nathan Deal in 2018.

Prior to joining the bench, Land spent nearly 26 years in private practice in Columbus, specializing in complex civil litigation. His legal career included record-setting verdicts and the defense of major class action lawsuits. He also earned the State Bar of Georgia’s William B. Spann Jr. Award for Pro Bono Advocacy.

A “Double Dawg,” Land graduated with highest honors from the University of Georgia, where he also earned his law degree. While in law school, he served on the Georgia Law Review, clerked for the Georgia Supreme Court, and was elected to the Order of the Coif.

Supreme Court Chief Justice Nels Peterson welcomed the appointment, stating, “His background and experience, including years as a state appellate judge, trial court judge, and litigator, position him well to serve on the state’s highest court. My fellow justices and I look forward to working with him.”

In addition to his legal accomplishments, Land has held leadership roles in numerous professional and community organizations, including the Columbus Bar Association and Habitat for Humanity.

Land will assume his new role on the state’s highest court following Kemp’s official appointment.

Nationwide protests begin against Trump’s immigration crackdown and health care cuts

FILE - Rodney Crowell, right, performs in the Ryman Auditorium during a celebration of life marking the one-year anniversary of U.S. Rep. John Lewis's death, July 17, 2021, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)

CHICAGO (AP) — Protests and events against President Donald Trump’s controversial policies that include mass deportations and cuts to Medicaid and other safety nets for poor people have started Thursday at more than 1,600 locations around the country.

The “Good Trouble Lives On” national day of action honors the late congressman and civil rights leader John Lewis. Protests were being held along streets, at court houses and other public spaces. Organizers have called for them to be peaceful.

“We are navigating one of the most terrifying moments in our nation’s history,” Public Citizen co-president Lisa Gilbert said during an online news conference Tuesday. “We are all grappling with a rise of authoritarianism and lawlessness within our administration … as the rights, freedoms and expectations of our very democracy are being challenged.”

Public Citizen is a nonprofit with a stated mission of taking on corporate power. It is a member of a coalition of groups behind Thursday’s protests.

Major protests were planned in Atlanta and St. Louis, as well as Oakland, California, and Annapolis, Maryland.

Honoring Lewis’ legacy

Lewis first was elected to Congress in 1986. He died in 2020 at the age of 80 following an advanced pancreatic cancer diagnosis.

He was the youngest and last survivor of the Big Six civil rights activists, a group led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. In 1965, a 25-year-old Lewis led some 600 protesters in the Bloody Sunday march across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama. Lewis was beaten by police, suffering a skull fracture.

Within days, King led more marches in the state, and President Lyndon Johnson pressed Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act that later became law.

“Get in good trouble, necessary trouble, and redeem the soul of America,” Lewis said in 2020 while commemorating the 1965 voting rights marches from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.

Chicago will be the flagship city for Thursday’s protests as demonstrators are expected to rally downtown in the afternoon.

Betty Magness, executive vice president of the League of Women Voters Chicago and one of the organizers of Chicago’s event, said the rally will also include a candlelight vigil to honor Lewis.

Much of the rest of the rally will have a livelier tone, Magness said, adding “we have a DJ who’s gonna rock us with boots on the ground.”

Protesting Trump’s policies

Pushback against Trump so far in his second term has centered on deportations and immigration enforcement tactics

Earlier this month, protesters engaged in a tense standoff as federal authorities conducted mass arrests at two Southern California marijuana farms. One farmworker died after falling from a greenhouse roof during a chaotic raid.

Those raids followed Trump’s extraordinary deployment of the National Guard outside federal buildings and to protect immigration agents carrying out arrests on Los Angeles. On June 8, thousands of protesters began taking to the streets in Los Angeles.

And organizers of the June 14 “No Kings” demonstrations said millions of people marched in hundreds of events from New York to San Francisco. Demonstrators labeled Trump as a dictator and would-be king for marking his birthday with a military parade.

By Corey Williams and Christine Fernando

Rushing to save swimmers, a former baseball player and police officer loses his life

Chase Childers, his wife Nataley, and their three children. (GoFundMe.com)

PAWLEYS ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Chase Childers, a former minor league baseball player and ex-police officer, has died after rushing into the ocean to save swimmers in a rip current, according to police in South Carolina and a GoFundMe page for his family.

Trying to help a family of five, Childers paid “the highest sacrifice with his life in front of his three children and wife,” according to the fundraiser. Childers died Sunday, the police department for Pawleys Island, which is south of Myrtle Beach, stated in a post on X.

Police said he and another person “entered the water to help 4 – 5 individuals who were in distress. Sadly, Mr. Childers was caught in the rip current, as well. He died trying to save others.”

When the family and the other man came back to shore, police, firefighters and the Coast Guard searched for Childers, WCBD-TV in Charleston reported. His body was recovered about 90 minutes later.

WCBD-TV reported that Childers, 38, lived in Dallas with his family, but they were vacationing on Pawleys Island. The island’s police chief, Michael Fanning, said he believes Childers’ “first responder instincts kicked in” when he saw the family in distress.

A rip current is a fast-moving column of water that flows away from the shore toward open water. Officials say swimmers caught in one should remain calm and then swim parallel to the shore to escape the current.

FILE – A section of the Pawleys Island pier is missing after Hurricane Ian, Oct. 1, 2022, in Pawleys Island, S.C. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

Childers grew up in Georgia’s Cobb County, which is northeast of Atlanta, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. Childers helped lead the North Cobb Christian School to a state baseball championship in 2003 and continued his baseball career at Georgia State University.

Childers signed with the Baltimore Orioles in 2009 and played two seasons in the minor leagues for teams in Florida and West Virginia, according to MLB.com.

Childers served as a police officer in Cobb County from 2011 to 2014, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. WCBD-TV reported that he received the Cobb County Police Department Life Saving award in 2012, while the GoFundMe page said he had saved several lives.

“Most importantly, he was a loving son, a dedicated brother, a treasured friend, an exceptional father to his three wonderful children, and the husband of his beautiful wife, Nataley, who had been his soulmate and best friend since they were teenagers,” the GoFundMe page stated.

Georgia will not join multi-state education lawsuit against the Trump administration

Bibb County teacher Heidi Hintermaier teaches a summer school reading class in Macon in June 2023. (Grant Blankenship/GPB News)

Georgia will not join the 24 states and Washington, D.C., that are suing the Trump administration to release $6 billion in promised federal education grants, Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said.

“Legally, whether you like or do not like the policy, the President has the authority to ensure that these federal funds are being spent lawfully,” he said in a statement provided to GPB News. “Like Governor Kemp, I will make sure that public education is fully funded in Georgia.”

The suit argues withholding the funds violates the Impoundment Act, governing how a president withholds funding. Meanwhile, Democratic U.S. Rep. Lucy McBath called for the release of the funds on the House floor Tuesday.

“Instead of being in your child’s classroom, your money is sitting in Washington, D.C., here because the Secretary of Education could not be bothered to meet a deadline that is the difference between a school having an after-school program or not,” McBath said.

Georgia school districts were supposed to receive around $40 million from the U.S. Department of Education on July 1 to pay for programs, including after-school programs. Those funds are currently under review by the Department of Education and have not been released to states.

This article comes to Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News

Democrats walk out on US Senate Judiciary vote on Trump judicial nominee Emil Bove

The U.S. Capitol on Oct. 9, 2024. (Jane Norman/States Newsroom)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — Despite a walkout from Democrats, Senate Republicans tasked with vetting nominees to the federal bench on Thursday claimed to advance President Donald Trump’s former criminal defense attorney, Emil Bove, one step closer to a spot on the U.S. Appeals Court that handles cases in Delaware, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

A spokesperson for Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley, who chairs the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, told States Newsroom the panel approved Bove’s nomination in a 12-0 vote — that is, despite panel rules that state “at least two members of the minority” must be present to transact committee business. The Iowa Republican’s office did not immediately respond to a follow-up question about committee rules.

In a show of opposition, all Democratic members of the panel, with the exception of Democratic Sen. Cory Booker, stood up and left as Republicans on the panel cast “aye” votes to push Bove’s nomination to the full Senate.

Booker, of New Jersey, refused to stop speaking as Grassley called the vote.

“You are a decent man. Why are you doing this?” Booker protested.

In a post on social media following the meeting, Josh Sorbe, press secretary for the committee’s minority, wrote: “Shameful day in Senate Judiciary. Republicans broke numerous committee rules, ignored privileged motions, denied debate, and rushed through judicial nominees without real vetting. Sen. BOOKER admonished them for it, and Democrats denied quorum and walked out.”

Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the panel, later issued a statement acknowledging the vote took place, but maintained Senate Republicans broke committee rules by ignoring Booker’s request for further debate and moving ahead with the vote.

“Chairman Grassley claimed that he was following Committee precedent. This is simply untrue,” Durbin said.

Questions about bribery charges, Jan. 6

Senate Democrats, former judges and advocates opposed Bove’s nomination over what they describe as unethical behavior, including questions about his role as a top Department of Justice official in the dismissal of federal bribery charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams and in the firing of prosecutors who worked on cases probing the Jan. 6, 2021, storming of the U.S. Capitol.

Critics also pointed to recent whistleblower accusations that Bove suggested ignoring a federal court order limiting Trump’s mass deportation campaign.

Bove represented Trump in his multiple federal criminal cases in 2023 and 2024, as well as in a New York state trial that ended in Trump’s conviction on 34 felonies for falsifying business records.

Trump appointed Bove as acting attorney general on his first day in office, and Bove shifted to principal associate deputy upon Attorney General Pam Bondi’s confirmation.

Bove’s nomination to a lifetime appointment on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit has been overshadowed by a whistleblower’s account alleging Bove told subordinates to consider defying a federal court order halting Trump’s deportation flights to El Salvador in March.

Both Bove and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, another of Trump’s former criminal defense attorneys, deny the allegations.

Grassley said Thursday prior to the vote that allegations against Bove “frankly crossed the line.”

“What we’re witnessing has all the hallmarks of a political hit job,” Grassley said.

Illinois’ Sen. Dick Durbin, the top Democrat on the panel, said in his opening statement Thursday that Bove “should not be seriously considered by the Senate for a lifetime appointment to the federal bench.”

“He led this administration’s embarrassing efforts to strike a corrupt bargain with New York City Mayor Eric Adams, and he has been trailed by a history of complaints, long predating his affiliation with President Trump, about his temperament, his poor judgment and lack of candor before the court,” Durbin said.

Whistleblower complaint

Durbin and fellow minority committee members requested the panel hear testimony from Erez Reuveni, a former senior DOJ official who filed a whistleblower complaint in which he alleged he was fired for refusing to follow department orders to undermine the courts in Trump’s deportation cases.

In the complaint submitted to the DOJ inspector general and Congress, Reuveni, who spent 15 years with the department, outlined “a pattern of deliberate defiance of federal court rulings related to immigration enforcement,” according to a summary from the Government Accountability Project and Gilbert Employment Law P.C., which filed the complaint on Reuveni’s behalf.

Lawmakers who viewed the complaint said Reuveni recounted witnessing Bove suggesting the DOJ might need to tell the courts “f— you” in relation to any order blocking the administration from sending planes full of deported migrants to El Salvador under the Alien Enemies Act.

“Mr. Reuveni has made credible allegations against Mr. Bove, which, if true, clearly disqualify him for a lifetime appointment to the federal bench. Thus, it is imperative that the Committee hear from Mr. Reuveni, under oath, before we vote on Mr. Bove’s nomination,” according to a letter Monday led by Durbin.

Grassley shut down the request Tuesday, writing in a response that documents provided by the minority to support the claim do not “substantiate any misconduct by Mr. Bove.”

“I respect whistleblowers and the whistleblowing process and have taken this matter seriously. I note that the available documents and the public record are inconsistent with some of the whistleblower’s assertions, which have been reviewed in good faith,” Grassley wrote.

Dozens of former judges protest nomination

More than 80 former federal and state judges described Bove’s nomination as a “disservice to the constitution, to law enforcement and to the rule of law” in a letter to Grassley and Durbin Tuesday.

The judges, including former 4th Circuit Judge Michael Luttig, a George H. W. Bush appointee who endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris last year, slammed Bove’s “egregious record of mistreating law enforcement officers, abusing power, and disregarding the law itself,” adding that the allegations disqualify him for the position.

The letter cited Bove’s alleged role in firing Federal Bureau of Investigation agents and DOJ officials who prosecuted those involved in storming the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Trump pardoned all of the nearly 1,600 Jan. 6 defendants on the first night of his second term, including the most violent convicted felons.

The former judges also called Trump’s nomination of his personal defense attorney to a federal judgeship “deeply inappropriate.”

“In fact, when President Trump nominated Bove, he posted on social media that Bove would ‘do anything else that is necessary to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN.’ That statement underscores the peril of confirming a nominee whose principal qualification appears to be personal loyalty to the president,” the former judges wrote.

Lena Zwarensteyn, senior director of the fair courts program at The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, said the list of concerns over Bove’s nomination “goes on and on and on.”

“I think when it comes down to it, you know, in a lifetime position that requires good judgment, wise discretion, good temperament and the dedication to the rights of all, Mr. Bove fails on every single one of those accounts,” Zwarensteyn told States Newsroom in an interview Wednesday.

GOP Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina, who announced his retirement after breaking ranks earlier this month on Trump’s budget reconciliation package, said Thursday he found nothing to prove Bove expressed support for Jan. 6 defendants — something that would have been a “red line,” he said.

“The fact of the matter is, I can’t find one piece of evidence where he said that the violent act against police officers were okay or condoned. If you find it, let me know,” Tillis said.

Bove, of Seneca Falls, New York, graduated from Georgetown University Law in Washington, D.C., in 2008. He clerked for Judge Richard J. Sullivan of the Southern District of New York, and Judge Richard C. Wesley, who now sits on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit.

Bove, 44, worked as a federal prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York, and in 2023 became a partner at Blanche Law, the private firm of Todd Blanche.

Tense confirmation hearing

Democratic senators, and in some cases Republicans, peppered Bove with questions and concerns about the numerous misconduct allegations during the Judiciary Committee’s June 25 confirmation hearing.

Booker said he remained worried about a “pattern of behavior” first reported by Politico in February regarding complaints about Bove’s temper from former colleagues in the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York.

“The allegations align with reports about your abuse of power now at the DOJ,” Booker said.

Sen. John Kennedy, a Louisiana Republican, pressed Bove on why the DOJ dismissed the federal corruption case against the New York mayor, who was charged with accepting illegal campaign contributions and luxury travel in exchange for favors.

The Trump administration moved to dismiss the Adams case in February, arguing the case interfered with the mayor’s ability to carry out immigration enforcement in the city. The administration requested a dismissal without prejudice — meaning Adams could be prosecuted again — but a federal judge ultimately dismissed the case in April with prejudice, citing concerns the White House would have leverage over Adams’ policy decisions.

“Do you believe in a higher being?” Kennedy asked Bove.

“It’s a very personal question, Senator, but I do,” Bove responded.

“I want you to look me in the eye and swear to your higher being when you answer this question, did you make a deal, a political deal, and dismiss the charges against Mayor Adams?” Kennedy said.

“Absolutely not,” Bove answered.