Tuberville vows to delay Biden judicial appointees over ‘lawfare or censorship’ in Trump’s ‘sham’ trial

U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., is joining five of his Republican colleagues in vowing not to allow fast tracking of any judicial or U.S. Attorney appointees by the Biden Administration.

In a post on social media platform X, Tuberville said the practice will continue until Election Day, in response to former President Trump’s conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records.

In a letter, Tuberville joins with Sens. J.D. Vance of Ohio, Mike Lee of Utah, Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Roger Marshall of Kansas and Eric Schmitt of Missouri.

In a letter, the six senators say their actions are pushing back against “the Biden Administration’s lawfare against his leading political appointment for the presidency.”

The letter makes this clear, in that the signees say they will also not permit the fast-tracking of nominees “who have suggested the Trump prosecutions were reasonable, endorsed President Trump’s guilt in these sham proceedings, joined or supported organizations that celebrated the indictment of President Trump,” or supported the candidacy of Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

They also vow to oppose anyone who “supported lawfare or censorship in other ways.”

Last month, Tuberville was among eight Republican senators to sign a letter by Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, pledging to block vote against any Democratic priority that comes to the Senate floor and to vote against any Biden administration political or judicial nominees.

A week ago, Tuberville said the country’s ongoing political battle is no longer between Democrats and Republicans, but between those who love America and those who want it changed.

“The American people need to wake up. This is a war,” Tuberville said, on Newsmax.