Counter-historically, the highest profile judicial election campaigns of the first judicial elections cycle following the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission were retention and ballot measure, rather than contested elections. Retention elections, in which voters cast their ballots either in favor of returning the incumbent judge to office for another term or for her removal, were intended to balance the values of judicial impartiality and accountability to the public.In Iowa, judicial retention elections-contests normally well beneath the radar even in Des Moines-became a national flashpoint for same sex marriage debates and, more to the point, for interest group spending in courts races. Also under...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
Judicial elections in the United States have undergone a dramatic transformation. For more than a ce...
States that elect judges are heir to a populist tradition dating back to the Jacksonian era. In the ...
November 2, 2010 is the latest milestone in the evolution of state judicial elections from sleepy, s...
States vary widely in their judicial selection systems, with some seeking more judicial accountabili...
Although 89% of state judges (appellate and general-jurisdiction trial judges) face some type of e...
Judges face retention elections in over a third of US state courts of last resort and numerous lower...
The judicial-merit selection and retention system for appointing judges to the bench was designed to...
As was true across the country, the elections held in Iowa this past November were tough on incumben...
Jordan M. Singer reflects on the uncertain future of judicial retention elections, in response to To...
The ousting of three Iowa Supreme Court Justices has sent shockwaves throughout the country for all ...
The vast majority of judicial offices in the United States are subject to election. The votes of the...
Those who are concerned about judicial independence and accountability in the United States quite ri...
During the twentieth century, judicial reformers attempting to depoliticize the selection of state c...
On November 8, 2005, something happened in Pennsylvania that has never happened before: an appellate...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
Judicial elections in the United States have undergone a dramatic transformation. For more than a ce...
States that elect judges are heir to a populist tradition dating back to the Jacksonian era. In the ...
November 2, 2010 is the latest milestone in the evolution of state judicial elections from sleepy, s...
States vary widely in their judicial selection systems, with some seeking more judicial accountabili...
Although 89% of state judges (appellate and general-jurisdiction trial judges) face some type of e...
Judges face retention elections in over a third of US state courts of last resort and numerous lower...
The judicial-merit selection and retention system for appointing judges to the bench was designed to...
As was true across the country, the elections held in Iowa this past November were tough on incumben...
Jordan M. Singer reflects on the uncertain future of judicial retention elections, in response to To...
The ousting of three Iowa Supreme Court Justices has sent shockwaves throughout the country for all ...
The vast majority of judicial offices in the United States are subject to election. The votes of the...
Those who are concerned about judicial independence and accountability in the United States quite ri...
During the twentieth century, judicial reformers attempting to depoliticize the selection of state c...
On November 8, 2005, something happened in Pennsylvania that has never happened before: an appellate...
In the US, state Supreme Court judges are either appointed, elected, or more commonly, are subject t...
Judicial elections in the United States have undergone a dramatic transformation. For more than a ce...
States that elect judges are heir to a populist tradition dating back to the Jacksonian era. In the ...