Wisconsin
Lawyer
Vol. 81, No. 1, January
2008
President's Message
Let's Take Politics Out
of Judicial Selection
The new Government Accountability Board should play a key role in
vetting applicants for judicial appointments. Use of the nonpartisan
board would remove politics from the judicial selection process, thus
helping to restore public confidence in our judicial system.
by Thomas J. Basting
Sr.
THERE HAS BEEN A LOT OF TALK lately about judicial selection,
judicial independence, judicial campaigns, and judicial
ethics. As promised, on Dec. 6, 2007, the State Bar launched the
Wisconsin Judicial Campaign Integrity Committee. This committee
will educate the public about the unique roles and responsibilities of
judges. It will actively seek pledges from candidates to adhere
to the goals of the Judicial Code of Conduct, and it will review
judicial campaign materials produced by candidates and their
supporters and provide comment to the public if those materials cross
the line of proper behavior during the election campaign. You can
learn more about the committee by going to its Web site,
www.WiFairCourts.com. In addition, Gov. Jim Doyle has asked for
meaningful public financing of Wisconsin Supreme Court elections, and I
applaud his efforts in that regard. These are all important
developments, but they are not the only issues or reforms needed for our
cherished judicial system.
Did you know that in the last 20 years up to an appointment recently
made in Rock County, governors have appointed 132 circuit court
and appellate court judges and supreme court justices in Wisconsin? Of
those appointments, 122 were for circuit
judge seats.
The candidates for these positions usually were vetted by a group of
lawyers chosen and appointed by a governor to serve on
a "judicial selection committee." The judicial selection
committee then interviewed applicants, rejecting some and sending
the names of vetted candidates to the governor's office for final
interviews and selection.
Because of the political nature of the process, rumors abound that
the process is subject to partisan influence and that,
on occasion, governors have told the committee which names to send up
for final selection; that political connections of the
applicant are more important than competency. In other words, the
process promotes public distrust and may discourage some
qualified candidates from applying for vacant judicial positions.
The process should be changed, and now is the time to do it.
Wisconsin has a newly formed Government Accountability
Board (GAB). The board is made up of highly respected nonpartisan
former judges. These former judges are particularly well equipped
to interview applicants for vacant judicial positions and to certify a
final list of candidates to the governor for selection. I urge
the governor to use the GAB to conduct the interviews of judicial
candidates and to certify the most qualified to the governor for
final selection. Politics would be removed from the process and the
public would be assured that only the most competent
candidates would be chosen to fairly and impartially administer our
system of justice.
Wisconsin
Lawyer