by Republicans. It would be rare to have someone appointed to the federal judiciary under the age of 40. That means that judges aged 80 and under were all appointed in the last 40 years. That takes us back to 1965. Democratic presidents served and nominated judges for 16 of those 40 years (Clinton - 8 years, Carter - 4 years and Johnson - 4 years). That means that, during the remaining 24 years, all judges were appointed by Republican presidents (Nixon, Ford - 8 years, Reagan - 8 years, Bush I - 4 years and Bush II - 4 1/2 years). I don't know the numbers of judges each of these president appointed, but, as we know, Clinton had enormous problems getting his judges approved -- so relatively few of the judges appointed since 1980 were appointed by Democratic presidents.
Here is what the Christian Science Monitor said on April 14, 2005
Conservatives near lock on US courts
. . . .
Republican appointees now constitute a majority of judges on 10 of the nation's 13 federal appeals courts. As few as three more lifetime appointments on key courts would tip the balance in favor of GOP appointees on all but one appeals court - the Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.
. . . .
If you have the time you can count the number of judges appointed by each president at
http://www.allianceforjustice.org/judicial/judicial_selection_resources/selection_database/byPresident.asp Note that very few of the Carter appointees are still active in the federal courts.
Republican justices are also in the majority on the Supreme Court -- Rehnquist, O'Connor, Scalia, Kennedy (all four Reagan appointees), Thomas, Souter (the two Bush I appointees) and Stevens (Ford appointee) v. Ginsburg, Breyer (both Clinton appointees). That's 7 Republicans to 2 Democrats. Thus, when the conservatives complain about the "liberal" judiciary, they are complaining about Republican appointees.