The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2006
Publications
This fourth edition of "The New Politics of Judicial Elections" shows how 2006 was
the most threatening year yet to the fairness of America's state courts. Special interest
pressure is metastasizing into a permanent national campaign against impartial
justice: High court elections featured broadcast television advertisements in more
than 91 percent of states with contested campaigns, median candidate fundraising hit
an all-time high, special interests began to pour money into lower court campaigns,
and pushy questionnaires sought to make judges accountable to special interests
instead of the law and the Constitution.
As we explain, defenders of fair and impartial courts are fighting back. More states are considering reforms to insulate their courts from special-interest excesses by reforming their judicial elections or advancing proposals to scrap them entirely. Many of America's judges used the 2006 campaigns to stand up to special interest bullying tactics. Civic and legal organizations are stepping up their efforts to educate Americans about the threat to impartial justice. And when Americans understand the threat, they want to protect the courts that protect their rights: A series of ballot measures that sought to politicize the courts all met defeat at the hands of voters.
