Pubdate: Wed, 12 Dec 2001 Source: Fayetteville Observer-Times (NC) Copyright: 2001 Fayetteville Observer-Times Contact: http://www.fayettevillenc.com/foto/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/150 All This And More JUDICIAL REFORM ISN'T ONLY ABOUT MONEY A.P. Carlton, incoming president of the American Bar Association, remarked to a North Carolina audience that North Carolina has long been a leader in judicial reform. That was not unearned flattery. It was fact. From the court reform movement of the 1960s onward, this state has been a champion of organization. At times, its passion for order has overshadowed a more important consideration: justice. Some aspects of structured sentencing leap to mind. But North Carolina has seldom been content to stand to one side and wait for others to show the way. It was reasonable, therefore, that Carlton urged the state to lead by working for the enactment of a bill, scheduled for the alleged "short" session next year, that would more tightly restrict the financing of judicial campaigns. The money, to be raised from income taxes and attorney license fees, would be distributed to qualified candidates for the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court. The bill was written in response to last year's big-bucks campaigns for appellate and Supreme Court seats, in which most of the money came from trial lawyers. That would be a step forward, and the state should take it. But it should also be forcing a debate on the one reform that would put the others to shame: an end to the popular election of judges. It is never easy to explain why it's a bad thing for the judiciary to be responsive to public opinion. But it can be done. First, abolishing judicial elections largely neutralizes all interest groups seeking to compromise the professional detachment of state officials whose job is to apply the law impartially and fairly. True, the interest groups can always wave their money under the nose of the governor, assuming it's the governor who does the appointing. But the governor lives in a fishbowl, and a quid pro quo there isn't likely to go unnoticed. Second, if there are no elections you don't have to worry about having your case tried by a judge whose opponent you publicly supported. Or one whose ruling is a foregone conclusion because he boxed himself in with stated or implied campaign promises having to do with abortion or drugs or some other hot-button issue. You want a judge who will hear the merits of your particular case, not an echo of his own campaign oratory. Third, judges, regardless of their personal ideology, should be seated because they have the training, the intellect and the strength to do what the job requires -- not because of their charisma. Fourth, and most fundamental, a judge who darts in whichever direction the majority appears to be moving at the moment, who never rows against the current, who quails at the prospect of giving a popular defendant a stiff sentence or at dismissing the charge against an unpopular one, is a poor excuse for a judge. The problem with judicial elections isn't you, personally. It's your neighbors, and their neighbors, and people all across the district or state. You may want them on your jury, but do you want their influence at work on the person whose job it is to know the law and the process and to see justice done? That's what judicial elections do, because, in the final analysis, that's what judicial elections are for. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth