The U.S. Senate narrowly confirmed Anne-Leigh Gaylord Moe, President Donald Trump’s nominee for the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, in a 53–46 vote. The decision marks another key step in Trump’s ongoing effort to reshape the federal judiciary with conservative judges committed to strict constitutional interpretation. Judge Moe, who has served on Florida’s Second District Court of Appeal since 2022, brings more than twenty years of legal experience, including nearly a decade as a circuit judge in Hillsborough County. Earlier in her career, she worked as an Assistant State Attorney in Tampa, earning recognition for her handling of complex criminal cases and advocacy for victims’ rights.
Trump praised her confirmation on Truth Social, calling Moe a “strong and principled advocate for law and order.” Republican lawmakers echoed this sentiment, describing her as a fair and disciplined jurist who applies the law as written. Senator Lindsey Graham hailed her as the kind of judge “the American people deserve.” Democrats, however, criticized her record, arguing that her rulings and conservative judicial philosophy align too closely with Trump’s hardline stance on immigration and criminal sentencing. Progressive groups warned that her appointment could shift legal outcomes in critical areas, including civil rights and criminal justice.