Oct 29 2009

Elections Bring out the Worst in our Best Judges

Just a few days ago, we reported on a negative banner ad that ran briefly and was sponsored by the Republican Party of PA in support of its judicial candidates. That banner featured a Soviet-style hammer and sickle inside the “O” of Obama. No, the president is not running as a PA judicial candidate – what relevance he has to our state judicial elections is unclear. What is clear is that the campaign between Democrat Jack Panella and Republican Joan Orie Melvin is getting ugly very quickly.

In the introduction to that post, we described the tone of a typical negative television ad – “clichéd black and white low-angle images of the opposing candidate, dramatic fade-ins of damning headlines, and music that would make Alfred Hitchcock proud.” Yesterday, we planned to write about a news report from Pittsburgh’s Channel 4 ABC news covering a TV ad sponsored by Panella’s campaign, which follows the negative campaign playbook almost to a tee: ominous tones, dark backgrounds, and most importantly – questionable statements about the opposing candidate.  The ad, according to the report, “has tough words, but little documentation to back up the attacks.”

That was yesterday. Since then, articles have been streaming in to our news desk about how this race keeps getting uglier, and how attacks, accusations, and negative ads are oozing from both sides. At least here in Philly, where we are all glued to our TV sets, these ads are getting a lot of attention. The gist of the ads getting airtime: Orie Melvin is bad for women; Panella is bad for children.

The Republican Party of Pennsylvania is now airing an ad which blames Panella for failing to stop the cash-for-kids scandal in Luzerne from happening. The ad claims, “Judge Panella turned his back on these children when he and the Judicial Conduct Board received a complaint about the judges.” But as John Baer at the Philadelphia Daily News pointed out, “[It] seems a stretch to lay the collapse of a county system at the feet of a single state judge.” Especially because the U.S. Attorney confirms the conduct board referred the issue to the feds, he explains.

But the poop-flinging is coming from both sides. In addition to the ad discussed in the Channel 4 piece, Panella’s campaign is running another doozy, with a “Warning for women,” that “only Panella will protect women in their healthcare decisions.”

Now, the Republican Party of PA is condemning the Panella ads, and accused him of violating the Pennsylvania Code of Judicial Conduct, while at the same time continuing to lay it on thick about Panella’s position on the Judicial Conduct Board during the Luzerne fiasco. Is this double speak, or just a “we’re bad, but they’re worse” tactic (not unfamiliar to Orie Melvin, who recently condemned  the $1 million Panella received from the trial lawyers while brushing off the $125 thousand her campaign received from the exact same group)?

Today, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review quoted our own Lynn Marks, executive director of Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts.

“The ads diminish the candidates and the judicial office in the minds of the public,” Marks said. “The reality is, it is very hard to educate the voters about what the courts do and about what candidates do and why they’d be good judges. These ads do not help the voters.”

We’ve met Panella and Orie Melvin, and they both strike us as honorable, decent people. One of them will soon be a justice on our state’s Supreme Court. The editorial boards of the state’s major papers seem to concur, as all noted in their endorsements that either candidate would be a good choice, and that both are highly qualified (except for this paper which refused to endorse any candidate because it is calling for the end to judicial elections). But campaigning brings out the worst in everyone. To quote Mr. Baer again:

So when you see judicial campaigns driven by special-interest-funded ads that stretch credulity . . . ask yourself if there just might be a better way to pick the people who sit on our highest court.

There is a better way. It’s called Merit Selection, and it protects the judiciary from all these negative side effects of campaigns and elections. We think it’s time Pennsylvania comes out of the 19th century, when our current election system was adopted, and move to a system that doesn’t debase the members of the judiciary by pushing them to stoop so low.

NOTE: JudgesOnMerit, PMC, and PMCAction are non-partisan and our cause is a non-partisan one. We do not support any judicial candidates or political parties, and we are equally critical of all problems with the judicial selection process.

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Sep 23 2009

Wisconsin Takes a Hard Look at the Way it Chooses Judges

Published by under Judges,News,Opinion

Last week, we wrote about a case currently before a state court panel in Wisconsin involving Michael Gableman, a then-candidate for the state’s Supreme Court who ran an ad against his incumbent opponent. The ad was quite misleading (at best).

According to the National Law Journal, that case may be ultimately headed for the U.S. Supreme Court. In 2007, Washington State’s Supreme Court struck down a state law that prohibited false political ads about opponents as violating the First Amendment protection free speech.  If the Wisconsin Supremes now rule against Gableman’s advertisement, a conflict between the states on an interpretation of the federal constitution will give rise to a basis for Supreme Court review.

Thomas Basting, president of the State Bar of Wisconsin during the election, said the bar’s judicial integrity campaign committee also was “highly critical” of the ad.

“I think the law is eventually going to say that, when you have a judicial election, it’s just the same as any partisan election,” Basting said.

Whichever way Wisconsin rules, the very fact that judicial candidates are mixed up in these types of questions – how low can you go when running for office and stay within your First Amendment rights – highlights the inherent flaw with judicial elections.  Bastings continued in the NLJ article:

“That’s why many of us in Wisconsin, including me, have come to the conclusion we need to take a hard look at the way we choose our judges.”

What will it take to convince Pennsylvanians to take a similar hard look?

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