Nov 10 2008
Texas Judicial Elections Renew Calls for Reform
Texas is looking at this year’s election results — where 22 of 26 Republican incumbent judges were voted off the bench — and remembering 1994, when all but one democratic incumbent judge were ousted. The Houston Chronicle reports that while some folks are gearing up for the next round of elections, others are renewing their calls for changing how judges are selected.
Just listen to what current Texas Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson is saying:
This is a strange way to select those who guard our legal rights. . . . It is time to decide whether partisan election is the best means to ensure judicial competence.
Jefferson is joined by former Texas Chief Justice Tom Phillips who long has supported implementing a Merit Selection system for Texas. According to Phillips, making elections nonpartisan will not solve the problems inherent in judicial electiosn, “including the involvement of special-interest groups, the need to raise money and curry votes, and the lack of voter knowledge of judicial candidates.”
We share the concerns of these Texas leaders and wish them luck. We recognize that the problems inherent in partisan judicial elections are getting worse, not better, and we hope that Pennsylvania will have the opportunity to choose Merit Selection as a better way to select appellate judges.
Tags: Houson Chronicle, judicial elections, other states, Texas, Tom Phillips, Wallace Jefferson

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