Townhall.com, Where Your Opinion Counts
Talk Radio:   Bill Bennett   Mike Gallagher   Dennis Prager   Michael Medved   Hugh Hewitt   
BREAKING NEWS  LeftArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican   RightArrow - Townhall.com : Conservative, Political, Republican  
Columns, funnies & more in your inbox!
  • Check the boxes and send us your email address to receveive your free newsletter
  • Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
  • Townhall.com’s weekly inside scoop on what’s happening behind the scenes in the world of politics. When news breaks, we report.
  • Signup to receive the latest daily Townhall cartoons
Sunday, November 18, 2007
Paul Jacob :: Townhall.com Columnist
Where do judges come from?
by Paul Jacob
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
[+] Text [-]
 
Poll
Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


Patricia Breckenridge was sworn in this past week as Missouri’s newest supreme court justice. It was a pleasant event, even a bit ho-hum, considering it culminated months of bitter disagreement over the method of choosing state court judges under a system known as the Missouri Plan.

No one questions Mrs. Breckenridge’s qualifications. She has been serving as an appellate court justice for the last 17 years and sat at a lower perch for nine years before that. It’s the process by which she found herself on the state’s supreme court that is at issue.

Breckenridge was appointed by Governor Matt Blunt. Well, that’s not entirely accurate. The governor chose Breckenridge from a list of three judges chosen by the state’s Appellate Judicial Commission. He is required to pick one of the three — or instead, to have this powerful commission do the picking for him.

You see, as I wrote in August, the commission handed the governor three nominees, all unacceptable to him. He wanted non-activist, conservative judges.

Conservatives urged Governor Blunt to fight the commission, but the governor eventually caved. He nominated Breckenridge from the commission’s menu, tepidly stating that he would “accept Judge Breckenridge’s statement that she will not seek to legislate from the bench.”

So, just who makes up the Appellate Judicial Commission? How are they chosen?

Good questions. The commission is made up of three members elected by the Missouri Bar Association and three members selected by the governor — each serving six-year terms. The seventh member? The sitting chief justice of the Missouri Supreme Court.

Is it a good idea to have our most powerful judges determined largely by a private organization? Shouldn’t we at least alternate the private group doing the choosing? One year it could be the state bar, another year Wal-Mart stockholders in the state, another year the Rolla Bowling League. In leap years, a statewide group of local bar owners might do the selecting.

And why have the governor appoint people to a commission which appoints people for the governor to appoint? A tad circuitous, no? And why have someone on the current court deciding who sits on the future court?

You can see what this seems like: an insider game, a stacked deck.

How to reform? By what process can we acquire justice, that is, justices in sympathy with the people, respectful of the law, and independent of the other political branches of government, as well as any special interest?

Start with principles, and go from there.

First, let the voters into the process. Elect the Appellate Judicial Commission in Missouri. And, of course, elect similar commissions in others states. That would end domination of the judicial selection process by the state’s Bar Association, or any private interest group.

The bar would fight this, of course. The assumption (common amongst supporters of the Missouri Plan) that the Bar Association is a public service group with a disinterested agenda, unaffected by biases, and exempt from corrupting influences, is hard to maintain with a straight face. Lawyers present a faction. They have an interest in keeping the law complicated, and expanding state involvement so to require suit and countersuit and consultation and a hundred other ways to put numbers into a billable hours column. It is far more reasonable to argue that the Bar is the last group one wants in charge of a judicial selection process, rather than the primary group. It is a guild, and its interests can be as antagonistic to the public interest as any group’s can possibly be.

Second, why not take résumés from anyone who wants to apply for the position? That seems not only modernly egalitarian, but also smart. We might find a really good person who would otherwise be overlooked by the legal and political insiders.

Third, judges should be chosen from geographic districts, not statewide. Smaller districts allow a closer connection between the people and the judge working on their behalf. With districts, when people have had enough of any certain judge, they can more easily campaign to defeat that judge at a future retention vote.

Fourth, more checks, even political checks, are better than fewer. Why? Well, we don’t want the nominee to be “politicized.” So, if the governor nominates, the legislature or just the Senate should then approve or reject that nominee.

Fifth, the entire process — including all resumes submitted and all deliberations by any commissions or legislative committees — must be open and transparent.

So a better system might look like this: The public elects a seven member commission from as many regions in the state, each commissioner serving a four-year term. When a vacancy occurs in the state appellate courts, this commission would take resumes for a period of time. Those resumes would be discussed both by the public and the commission. The commission would nominate three people for the governor to choose from. The governor’s choice would then require approval from the legislative branch. Then, once confirmed, the justices would face the voters in a retention election.

More voter control. A more open process. More checks and balances. Less control by the legal community.

Missourians — and all Americans — need their judges selected in such a way as to avoid the undue influence of factions as well as politicians.

Share:
Vote on It:
Average Vote:
 
About The Author
Paul Jacob is President of Citizens in Charge. His daily Common Sense commentary appears on the Web, via e-mail, and on radio stations across America.
 
TOWNHALL DAILY: Sign up today and receive Townhall.com daily lineup delivered each morning to your inbox.
Missouri Non Partisan Plan
The Missouri Plan is far from perfect but better than the selection process in other states and light years ahead of what Paul Jacob is proposing.
Roy Blunt's little boy, Matt, is a willing captive of the Insurance industry which is opposed to an independent judiciary- free from political pressure and campaign fund raising activities.
Mr Jacob should spend some time researching why the Insurance industry is exempt from most of the anti-monopoly laws in the US. Start with a review of the McCarren-Ferguson act. Why is that law still applicable today? I will look forward to reading his column on that issue.

"First, kill all the lawyers..."
Attorneys at practice MUST be disallowed from participating in any law making body i.e. city boards, legislatures, Congress. This will ensure those that have to live by the law understand it and have an active role in making it. And they have no rational reason to be involved in the selection of Judges. They spend their careers looking to find judges sympathetic to them or their cases. How naive we have been to allow the BAR to even suggest a nominee.

Our judicial system has gotten so far away from justice a rational person can only wonder....

No court should be allowed to make an interpretation of the law. Their Constitutional role is to say only whether the law is allowed under the Constitution; if it is not, it should be referred to the enacting body for 90 days for correction or it becomes null and void. The secondary role is to say whether the law is violated and to what degree. Then REASONABLE penalties should be declared. Mandatory sentences do not fit every situation. That's when a judge should use his rational discretion.

The current selection process for SCOTUS is reversed. Congress should propose the candidates after their vetting process. Then the President should appoint the man he believes is closest to his concept of a man who will honor the Constitution as written and amended.

NY is one of the last
karoden...

NY is one of the last to allow non-attorneys on the bench.

In Missouri, they only allow a non-attorneys to serve as a municipal judge in a town of 7500 or less. Municipal judges only rule on local ordinances.

None of the attorneys want to admit that some of the best legal minds this country has ever had, never graduated from law school.

1. Patrick Henry (1736-1799), member of the Continental Congress, governor of Virginia

2. John Jay (1745-1829), first chief justice of the Supreme Court

3. John Marshall (1755-1835), chief justice of the Supreme Court

4. William Wirt (1772-1834), attorney general

5. Roger B. Taney (1777-1864), secretary of the treasury, chief justice of the Supreme Court

6. Daniel Webster (1782-1852), secretary of state

7. Salmon P. Chase (1808-1873), senator, chief justice of the Supreme Court

8. Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865), president

9. Stephen Douglas (1813-1861), representative, senator from Illinois

10. Clarence Darrow (1857-1938), defense attorney in Scopes trial of 1925. [While Clarence Darrow attended a law school for one year, he did not distinguish himself and preferred to study law on his own. He received the greater part of his education in a law office in Youngstown, Ohio.]

11. Robert Storey (b. 1893), president of the American Bar Association (1952-1953)

12. J. Strom Thurmond (b. 1902), senator, governor of South Carolina

13. James O. Eastland (b. 1904), senator from Mississippi

Where Do Judges Come From ???
After a 25 year career in the law enforcement field it is my opinion that the judges we the people get to vote for are the ones chosen by your county, state, and federal Bar Assc. members.
If you think you are voting for a judge of your choosing then I have some shares in the Brooklyn Bridge that I will sell you at very reasonable prices.
On the state and federal benches it is all about patronage and political payback.
In New York state their is a move under way at the highest judicial level to insist that all judges even down to the Town Justice level be attorney's at law. If it is successful than the lawyers will have taken over the control of our judical system completely.
Where Do Judges come from ???? They come from the wealthy, and vested, and the legal community as if to say that a law degree infers honesty, integrity, and possibly knowledge.

kahunah
I can't see any of it happening, or at least, it is a really low probability event.

And it is not just that it appears the State Legislator would appoint the judges, the actually would. The intent is to get it out of Washington and back to the States as was orignally intended. Sure, liberal States like CA, MA, and NY would appoint liberal judges. Conseravtive States would appoint conservative judges. Some States, hopefully would appoint originalist judges. But when it came time to appoint a Supreme, at least the States would get to vote and not a committee in the Senate controlled by pols like drunkard Ted the swimmer.

Checks and Balances
Vic...

Thanks for responding. As you can see, I was just razzing you a bit. :>)

You did make it appear as though the State Legislature would appoint members to the federal judiciary. I can't see that happening.

One of the biggest problems that I see in our government is that attorneys, who for all purposes are in the Judiciary family, need to stay out of the Legislature. The Separation of Powers is so important to the system of checks and balances that further blurring will result in the demise of this country.

We currently have the U.S. Senate dominated by attorneys. They create laws that feed other attorneys. That just doesn't make much sense to me. Attorneys are trying to fill all the seats in our representative republic. Look at every candidate. Attorneys sure do want to influence this country. That must be because they have such a good and honest reputation.

“Laws are made for men of ordinary understanding and should, therefore, be construed by the ordinary rules of common sense. Their meaning is not to be sought for in metaphysical subtleties which may make anything mean everything or nothing at pleasure.” —Thomas Jefferson

Does anyone think the laws that are currently being created in this country can be understood by men of ordinary understanding? Is the Supreme Court searching for metaphysical subtleties which make everything mean anything or nothing at pleasure?

The spirit and legislative intent of the law should be what the Supreme Court uses to find their answers.

kahunah
No, the State Legislators would not control the SCOTUS. Does the president control it now?

The State legislators used to appoint the Senators not that long ago and things in the Senate were much better then.

As for dismissal for frivolous reasons I don't think that would be a concern, especially not with a 2/3 requirement. The current impeachment criteria of "high crimes and misdemeanors" is virtually any reason already.

My method would return political power to the States and eliminate grandstanding on TV. We must recognize that the S.C. has become just another political organ of the Federal Government with rulings over the past 75 years that have very little to do with the actual Constitution. If that is the going to be the case, then it needs to be treated like a political organization.

scotus
Why not alternate the selection of judges no matter which political party is in power no matter how many judges to be appointed.The parties alternate their choices.It would take awhile but this way it would be harder to stack the court

The Seperation of Powers
Vic...

Are you suggesting that the State Legislature would control the federal judiciary?

I don't think that you have thought this thru. We have a state constitution and a U.S. Constitution. The state cannot have control over the federal judiciary.

"Any judge may be removed at any time for any reason" - Even wearing white shoes after Labor Day?

"An age limit for ALL judges would be set at 80" - Although wisdom does come from years of experience, We have entered a era of technology that is beyond the comprehension of many. Starting at age 65 we should administer a comprehension test every 5 years. You fail; you're out.

The best way to restore our Judiciary is to stop electing attorneys to serve in the Legislature. This blurs the Separation of Powers Doctrine.

Read more on my blog. For more information on the sad state of Missouri’s government; go to: http://www.kahunah.com

Reform
In order to take as much of the bickering and Party politics as possible out of it we need to remove it from Washington all together. here is what I would do if I were "dictator for the day":

1. The judicial circuits would be broken down as follows:

- Each State would have at least 1 Federal court, more if population requires. Judges would be appointed by that State's lowest legislative body.
- Appellate courts would be comprised of a group of States, with one judge per State. Each State would appoint a judge in a manner similar to the State courts. There would be an odd number of States in each of these.
- The Supreme Court would have one judge from each State also. In the case of the Supreme Court, the judges would come from the district appellate courts and there would be one from each district. State legislators nations wide would nominate which district appelate judge (from the empty SC district seat) would take the seat.

2. An age limit for ALL judges would be set at 80 with an option for the judges to retire any time they desired.

3. Any judge may be remove at any time for any reason by the SAME authority that appointed them, except that it would take a 2/3 majority of the votes for removal.

4. A specific article would be placed in the Constitution forbidding judges from reading anything into the wording that is NOT specifically stated. If it isn't Stated, then it isn't there.

PS: Sorry about the abbreviation mishap.

Nam65-66, I like your
basic idea, but I would let the POTUS nominate only one justice per 4-year term. Four nominations for a one-term president or eight nominations for a two-term president is way too much power placed in ANY president's hands.

Can you say "term limits"...
...at the Supreme Court level?

Lifetime appointments to anything is not good and will eventualy lead to corruption.

What I would like to see is eventualy each justice serve nine years,staggard by one appointment per year.Jimmy Carter appointed no justices during his presidency.It is good to isolate the Court from direct election of the people,but not by too much.A president who wins one term will get to nominate four justices,two terms eight justices.The Senate would retain their advise and consent power.Pay them a million dollar a year salary for nine years as a cap to their professional legal career.That way every president would nominate at least four justices to indirectly reflect the will of the people.Of course we know that the president only nominates justices,it is the Senate that appoints them

pt 2
The actual method of "picking" a judge was left pretty much to the President still for a long time. The Senate usually went along with whoever was picked, as long as they were not such a bad pick that it would make them look like fools. In addition, for most of out history picks went straight to the Senate for a short debate and an up or down vote. It wasn't until 1925 that committees got into the process. And finally, with the nomination of Robert Bork, the process was turned into a raging political circus full of acrimony and lies. In other words, something that had been a solemn bipartisan affair was turned into another political election. The Republicans tried to restore it to it's roots when they had the Senate and Clinton picked judges by allowing crazed liberals to be appointed without serious debate. The Dems however refused to go back, as has been seen throughout the Bush administration.

It is time to develop a new method of selecting a judge. In fact, it is time to reform the entire judicial process. This will require another Constitutional Convention however, because it appears that congress is incapable of any serious reform in any subject.

Mr. Jacob
While I agree that MS appears to have a bizarre method of choosing SC justices, that is a problem for MS. I don't think that the current method of choosing SCOTUS justices has worked very well in the past 75 years. Before the rest of us start picking nits out of Missourian's eyes, we should first clean up the lice in our own.

LOL, you say that the MS method is a game of insiders picking the judges. Isn't that the way ALL political things get done? For the SCOTUS judges, first the AG develops a list of judges by some criteria that the President has. The list is reviewed by a few insiders for comment and the FBI vets the picks. A short list is developed and the president selects one or two individuals from that list. After interviewing those he picks one and forwards the name to the ABA who will then vet the pick (most of the time). I ask, where in that process is the public, or even an elected person other than the President? Of course the answer is nowhere.

Now this process wasn't that bad for a long time in our nation's history. We got some winners and we got some losers but overall the justices were fairly good. All of that ended in the 1930s with the advent of our Nation's worst President, FDR. The court initially fought his unconstitutional socialist schemes. He came up with an outlandish court packing scheme that he tried to get congress to go along with. Even his own party saw the danger of this and refused. The scheme however was successful at intimidating the court because shortly after they commenced ruling in FDR's favor and the long slide to socialism/communism began. In addition, due to his being in office for 4 terms he got to appoint a majority of the justices coming out of the 40s.

cont

the beauty of federalism
It's great that the states can do weird stuff.
Let's the 49 learn from examples, good & bad.
Sign Up to Post Your CommentsSign Up to Post Your Comments
If you are already registered, click here to login. Otherwise, please take a few seconds to register with Townhall.com. Once you sign up, you’ll be able to post your comments immediately, use the action center, get podcasts, and more!
Note: Fields marked with a red asterisk (*) are required.
Salutation:
First Name:
*
Last Name:
*
Email:
*
Nickname:
*
Note: Nick name will be shown when you post comments.
Address 1:
*
Address 2:
City:
*
State:
*
Zip:
*
Phone:
      
Your daily must-read of conservative columns, cartoons and news. Coulter, Sowell, Krauthammer and more.
(Bi-Weekly) We highlight the best opportunities from our partners for surveys, action items and more.