Oct 24 2008

Texas Needs a Better Way to Select Judges

An opinon piece in the San Antonio Express-News argues that electing judges just doesn’t make sense.  Bruce Davidson writes:

Good judges hate to raise money and act like politicians.

But the Texas judicial selection system forces them to be politicians, and that creates a major perception problem about Texas justice.

Texas, like Pennsylvania, elects all judges in partisan election contests. We’ve written recently about a new study finding that the majority of campaign contributions in the current campaign come from parties and lawyers who have recently litigated in the state Supreme Court.

The real problems with this system are the partisan election of judges who are supposed to be independent umpires and the flow of contributions that also undermines the perception of unbiased fairness.

Davidson also writes of the lack of information about the candidates available for voters seeking to make informed decisions.  His preferred solution is Merit Selection with retention elections: “Texans could dump bad judges, partisan sweeps would be eliminated and special-interest influence would be reduced.”

We agree that Merit Selection solves the problems inherent in using expensive partisan elections to select judges.  We wish them luck in Texas and hope Pennsylvanians will get to weigh in on whether we should change how we pick our appellate court judges.

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