Bills Would Restore Party Labels To Judicial Races | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Publisher's note: The author of this political post Barry Smith, who is an associate editor to the Carolina Journal, John Hood Publisher.

Backers say partisan affiliation gives voters information about candidates' views

    RALEIGH     North Carolina could come full circle by 2014 in the way candidates for judicial posts are identified. Currently, judicial elections are nonpartisan. Republicans in the House and the Senate have filed bills that would restore party labels to North Carolina judicial elections -- from the District Court to the Supreme Court -- reversing a trend that started nearly two decades ago.

    Supporters of the change say party affiliation provides information to voters who tend to have little knowledge of the philosophical leanings of judicial candidates. The measures also would end taxpayer financing of campaigns for appellate judges. Backers of the current system say survivors of partisan primaries are likely to represent the ideological extremes of each party and may not be inclined to judge legal issues fairly.

    North Carolina's judicial candidates were placed on the ballot by their political party affiliation until the late-1990s. In 1998, the state's voters began electing Superior Court judges on a nonpartisan basis. In 2002, District Court judicial elections shifted to a nonpartisan system.

    In 2002, the General Assembly completed the transition from party labels to nonpartisan judicial selection by making elections for N.C. Supreme Court justices and N.C. Court of Appeals judges elections nonpartisan, beginning with the 2004 elections. Also in 2004, the state moved to a public (or taxpayer) financing system for appellate court judges' campaigns.

    "Ninety-five percent of the people going to vote know nothing about the judges unless they know them personally," said Rep. Frank Iler, R-Brunswick, a sponsor of the bill in the House. Iler said adding party labels would give voters more education than they'd have without the labels.

    Rep. Deborah Ross, D-Wake, doesn't think the change is a good idea. "I don't think going back to partisan judicial elections is a good idea because I think it's good to have judges who don't identify with a party," Ross said. "What they identify with should be the rule of law and justice. We become even more politicized."

    Sen. Jerry Tillman, R-Randolph, who filed the Senate bill, noted that he filed a similar bill in the Senate two years ago. It gained Senate approval, but stalled in the House. "I'm just doing it so you'll have more information," Tillman said.

    Tillman noted that about 1 million fewer people cast ballots for the Supreme Court justice race in 2012 than cast ballots for president and governor.

    "People want to know what party they are [with] where I come from," Tillman said.

    Both Tillman and Iler said the move to take party labels off the judicial races was spurred by the success Republicans were having at the ballot box.

    "When this was changed, the thinking was a certain party was losing judges," Iler said.

    Former Supreme Court Justice Bob Orr, a Republican, said he did not support the legislation that changed the appellate judicial races to nonpartisan contests and instituted public financing.

    "I thought the primary reason for the passage was not good government, but to reverse the trend of Republicans getting elected," Orr said.

    But Orr said he doesn't think either the current nonpartisan contests or a return to partisan races is the best way to select appellate judges.

    "We do need to reform the system," Orr said. He said he prefers giving the governor the authority to appoint judges when a vacancy occurs. Then after the judge has served some period, allow for retention elections, where voters would have an up-or-down vote on the choice.

    A change of that magnitude would require an amendment to the N.C. Constitution. Restoring partisan labels to judicial races can be accomplished by legislative action.

    David Bohm, assistant executive director of the N.C. Bar Association, said the organization is not taking a position on the bills. However, he did say that the bar association traditionally has opposed both partisan elections and the $50 surcharge on lawyers' licenses that help finance the appellate judicial campaigns.

    Ross said she has a couple of reasons for opposing the bills. One is she thinks the primary process for selecting party nominees will lead to more ideological nominees.

    "I think the primary process will not give us people who have necessarily the most balanced background," Ross said. "We are a purple state. It would be bad, particularly in a judicial election, which isn't a policy sort of election, to create a situation that becomes more polarized."

    Ross also said she thought the public financing of campaigns should be retained so that potential appellate judges won't be soliciting from lawyers who may represent clients before the higher courts.

    "It's unseemly for judges to ask for money from people who are going to appeal before them," Ross said.

    Tillman said requiring candidates to raise enough money to campaign is one way to nudge them into make themselves better known to the voters.

    "You need to get out and meet the people," Tillman said.
Go Back


Leave a Guest Comment

Your Name or Alias
Your Email Address ( your email address will not be published)
Enter Your Comment ( no code or urls allowed, text only please )




Senate advances Domestic Energy Jobs Act to stimulate energy production, job growth Statewide, Government, State and Federal Governor McCrory Announces Appointments


HbAD0

Latest State and Federal

The Missouri Senate approved a constitutional amendment to ban non-U.S. citizens from voting and also ban ranked-choice voting.
Police in the nation’s capital are not stopping illegal aliens who are driving around without license plates, according to a new report.
House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-OH) is looking into whether GoFundMe and Eventbrite cooperated with federal law enforcement during their investigation into the financial transactions of supporters of former President Donald Trump.
Far-left Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) was mocked online late on Monday after video of her yelling at pro-Palestinian activists went viral.
Daily Wire Editor Emeritus Ben Shapiro, along with hosts Matt Walsh, Andrew Klavan, and company co-founder Jeremy Boreing discussed the state of the 2024 presidential election before President Joe Biden gave his State of the Union address on Thursday.
Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley said this week that the criminal trials against former President Donald Trump should happen before the upcoming elections.
Vice President Kamala Harris ignored recommendations while attorney general of California to investigate an alleged pyramid scheme at a company linked to her husband, according to documents obtained by The New York Post.
'The entire value add of Hunter Biden to our business was his family name and his access to his father, Vice President Joe Biden'

HbAD1

 
Back to Top