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The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2000-2009, Brennan Center for Justice, 2010

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About the Brennan Center For Justice
The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of
Law is a nonpartisan public policy and law institute that focuses on
CENTER
fundamental issues of democracy and justice. The Center’s work
FOR JUSTICE includes voting rights, campaign finance reform, racial justice in
criminal law and presidential power in the fight against terrorism.
Part think tank, part public interest law firm, part advocacy group,
the Brennan Center combines scholarship, legislative and legal advocacy, and communications to
win meaningful, measurable change in the public sector.

BRENNAN

For more information, visit www.brennancenter.org.
About the National Institute on Money in State Politics
The National Institute on Money in State Politics collects, publishes, and analyzes
data on campaign money in state elections. The database dates back to the 1990
election cycle for some states and is comprehensive for all 50 states since the
1999–2000 election cycle. The Institute has compiled a 50-state summary of
state supreme court contribution data from 1989 through the present, as well as complete, detailed
databases of campaign contributions for all state high-court judicial races beginning with the 2000
elections.
For more information, visit www.followthemoney.org.
About the Justice at Stake Campaign
The Justice at Stake Campaign is a nonpartisan national partnership working
to keep our courts fair, impartial and free from special-interest and partisan
agendas. In states across America, Campaign partners work to protect our
courts through public education, grass-roots organizing and reform. The
Campaign provides strategic coordination and brings organizational, communications and research
resources to the work of its partners and allies at the national, state and local levels.
For more information, visit www.justiceatstake.org.

This report was prepared by the Justice at Stake Campaign and two of its partners, the Brennan Center for Justice and
the National Institute on Money in State Politics. It represents their research and viewpoints, and does not necessarily
reflect those of other Justice at Stake Campaign partners, funders or board members. Publication of this report was
supported by grants from Carnegie Corporation of New York, Democracy Alliance Partners, the Joyce Foundation, the
Moriah Fund, the Open Society Institute, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and Wallace Global Fund.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2000–2009: Decade of Change Published August 2010

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CHAMBERS Of

JUSTICE SANDRA DAY O'CONNOR (RET.)

August 2010

Dear Reader:
I am pleased to introduce The New Politics ofJudicial Elections, 2000-2009: Decade of
Change. This report, the latest in a series begun in 2000, provides a comprehensive review of
the threat posed by money and special interest pressure on fair and impartial courts.
We all expect judges to be accountable to the law rather than political supporters or special
interests. But elected judges in many states are compelled to solicit money for their election
campaigns, sometimes from lawyers and patties appearing before them. Whether or not these
contributions actually tilt the scales of justice, three out of every four Americans believe that
campaign contributions affect cOUltroom decisions.
This crisis of confidence in the impaliiality of the judiciary is real and growing. Left
unaddressed, the perception that justice is for sale will undermine the rule of law that the courts
are supposed to uphold.
To avoid this outcome, states should look to reforms that take political pressure out of the
judicial selection process. In recent years, I have advocated the system used in my home state
of Arizona, where a bipartisan nominating committee recommends a pool of qualified
candidates from which the governor appoints judges to fill vacancies. Voters then hold judges
accountable in retention elections. Other promising state initiatives have included public
financing of judicial elections, campaign disclosure laws, and recusal reforms.
We all have a stake in ensuring that courts remain fair, impartial, and independent. If we fail to
remember this, partisan infighting and hardball politics will erode the essential function of our
judicial system as a safe place where every citizen stands equal before the law.
For 10 years, the New Politics reports have played a leading role in documenting the growing
threat to the credibility of our courts. I applaud the authors-Justice at Stake, the Brennan
Center for Justice, the National Institute on Money in State Politics, and the Hofstra Law
School-for working to protect the courts that safeguard our rights.
Sincerely,

Sandra Day O'Connor

717 D Street, NW, Suite 203
Washington, D.C. 20004
Phone (202) 588-9700 • Fax (202) 588-9485
info@justiceatstake.org
www.justiceatstake.org

The Justice at Stake Campaign is a nonpartisan national partnership working to keep our courts fair and impartial. Across America,
Campaign partners help protect our courts through public education, grass-roots organizing, coalition building and reform. The
Campaign provides strategic coordination and brings unique organizational, communications and research resources to the work of its
partners and allies at the national, state and local levels.
The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2000–2009: Decade of Change Published August 2010

Visit us at www.justiceatstake.org

THE

NEW POLITICS OF

JUDICIAL ELECTIONS 2000-2009

DECADE OF

CHANGE

by
James Sample
Hofstra University School of Law
Adam Skaggs and Jonathan Blitzer
Brennan Center for Justice at NYU School of Law
Linda Casey
National Institute on Money in State Politics
Charles Hall, Editor
Justice at Stake Campaign

Table of Contents
List of Charts and Figures 

page vi

Executive Summary

page 1

Chapter 1
The Money Explosion

Page 5

Rise of the Super Spenders

Page 9

The Threat to Justice

Page 9

How We Got Here

Page 14

Rise of the Super Spenders: Alabama

Page 15

Super Spenders in Other States

Page 16

Triumph of the Super Spenders: Illinois 

Page 16

Money: Focus on 2007-08

Page 17

Other States of Note in 2007-08

Page 21

2009 High Court Elections: Costly Trends Continue

Page 21

Chapter Notes

Page 23

Chapter 2
Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

Page 24

Independent Ads Lead the Attack

Page 25

Party Ads Crucial in ’08

Page 28

State in Focus: Michigan

Page 30

TV: Focus on 2008

Page 31

State in Focus: Wisconsin

Page 32

2007: TV Spending in an Off Year

Page 36

Chapter Notes

Page 37

Chapter 3
Who Played? Who Won?

iv	

Page 24

Introduction: After the Flood

Page 38

Nationalizing of Court Elections

Page 39

The Left: Organizing at the State Level

Page 41

The National Networks

Page 42

American Justice Partnership 

Page 42

U.S. Chamber of Commerce Network

Page 43

American Tort Reform Association

Page 44

The Secret Money Players

Page 44

Democratic Judicial Campaign Committee

Page 44

State-Level Coalitions

Page 45

Texas Titans: Bob Perry and Fred Baron

Page 45

Focus on Alabama: Shell Game on the Left

Page 46
Table of Contents

Michigan/Wisconsin: What’s Behind the Curtain?

Page 48

Georgia: Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

Page 49

The Battle for America’s Courts

Page 50

Quotes From the Decade 

Page 52

Chapter Notes

Page 54

Chapter 4
Litigation: The Battle Inside the Courtroom

Page 55

Caperton v. Massey: When Judges Must Step Aside

Page 55

Who Decides What Is Fair and Impartial?

Page 56

An Earlier Case of Election Bias?

Page 57

The Caperton Coalition: Diverse Groups Rally to Defend Impartial Justice

Page 58

Judicial Speech: How Far Can Candidates Go?

Page 61

Campaign Finance Returns to the High Court

Page 62

Balancing Two Constitutional Rights: Free Speech and Fair Trials

Page 64

Chapter Notes

Page 66

Chapter 5
Public Takes Note, Decision-Makers Begin to Follow

Page 67

Recent Reform Efforts

Page 67

The Broader Reform Menu	

Page 69

The Rise and Fall of Judicial Tampering by Ballot Measures

Page 71

The Media Take Note

Page 72

Judicial Appointments: The Emerging Battlefront

Page 73

U.S. Chamber of Commerce and Merit Selection

Page 74

The Voters Weigh In

Page 74

Debate in the Business Sector

Page 75

Hanging a ‘For Sale’ Sign Over the Judiciary

Page 76

Chapter Notes

Page 76

Appendices
Appendix 1: State Profiles, 2000–2009

Page 78

Appendix 2: Supreme Court TV Advertisements 2008

Page 86

Appendix 3: Facts About State Court Election and Appointment Systems

Page 99

Appendix 4: About the Authors

Page 100

Photo Sources

Page 102

Index

Page 104

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

v

List of Charts and Figures
Chapter 1
The Money Explosion
1.  State Supreme Court Fundraising by Biennium

Page 5

2.  Total Supreme Court Fundraising Ranked by State, 2000–2009 

Page 6

3.  Contributions by Sector, 2000–2009 High Court Elections 

Page 8

4.  Super Spenders and What They Spent 

Page 10

5.  Total Spending for Top 10 States, 2000–2009 High Court Elections 

Page 12

6.  Top U.S. Super Spenders, 2000–2009 High Court Elections

Page 13

7.  Supreme Court Fundraising: Partisan, Nonpartisan and Retention Elections

Page 14

8.  Total Supreme Court Spending: Top 10 States, 2007–08 

Page 17

9.  Top 10 Supreme Court Super Spenders, 2007–08 

Page 18

10.  Contributions by Sector, 2007–08 

Page 19

11.  Supreme Court Fundraising by Candidates on Ballot, 2007–08 

Page 20

Chapter 2
Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

vi	

12.  Number of TV Ad Airings by Year, 2000–2009 High Court Elections 

Page 25

13.  Total Spending on TV Ads, 2000–09 

Page 26

14.  Ohio 2000 Ad: Is Justice for Sale? 

Page 26

15.  High Court Election TV Spending, 2000–2009 

Page 27

16.  Top 12 TV Ad Spenders, 2000–2009 High Court Elections 

Page 28

17.  Greater Wisconsin Committee, TV Ad from 2008 

Page 29

18.  TV Spending, 2008 High Court Elections 	

Page 29

19.  The Sleeping Judge: Democratic Ad Slams Michigan Chief Justice

Page 30

20.  Sponsors and Tone, 2008 High Court Election Ads 

Page 31

21.  2008 Anti-Butler Ad Triggered Questions on Truth, Race 

Page 33

22.  Alabama 2008: Ad Ties Candidate to Special Interests

Page 34

23.  Michigan 2008: Challenger Assailed as Soft on Terrorism

Page 35

24.  TV Spending, 2007 High Court Elections 

Page 36

25.  TV Spending in Off-Year High Court Elections, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin 

Page 36

List of Figures

Chapter 3
Who Played? Who Won?
26.  Washington 2006: National Groups Finance Attack Ads in State Race

Page 38

27.  Top Supreme Court Spenders, 2000–09 and 2007–08 

Page 40

28.  PACs Used by Beasley Allen to Mask High Court Donations 

Page 47

29.  Map: The Battle for America’s Courts

Page 50

Chapter 4
The Battle Inside the Courtroom
30.  New York Times Caperton Headline

Page 55

31.  Chronology of Avery v. State Farm Controversy 

Page 57

32.  Washington Post Citizens United Headline

Page 63

Chapter 5
Public Takes Note, Decision-Makers Begin to Follow
33.  What the Public and Business Leaders Think

Page 68

34.  South Dakota Amendment E Ad

Page 71

35.  Ad for Greene County Nonpartisan Court Plan

Page 73

36.  Ad against Greene County Nonpartisan Court Plan 

Page 73

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

vii

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009

Executive Summary

State judicial elections have been transformed during the past decade. The story of America’s
2000–2009 high court contests—tens of millions of dollars raised by candidates from parties who
may appear before them, millions more poured in by interest groups, nasty and misleading ads, and
pressure on judges to signal courtroom rulings on the campaign trail—has become the new normal.
For more than a decade, partisans and special interests of all stripes have been growing more organized
in their efforts to use elections to tilt the scales of justice their way. Many Americans have come to
fear that justice is for sale.
Unlike previous editions, which covered only the most recent election cycle, this fifth edition of the
“New Politics of Judicial Elections” looks at the 2000–2009 decade as a whole. By tallying the numbers and “connecting the dots” among key players over the last five election cycles, this report offers
a broad portrait of a grave and growing challenge to the impartiality of our nation’s courts. These
trends include:
➜➜ The explosion in judicial campaign spending, much of it poured in by “super
spender” organizations seeking to sway the courts;
➜➜ The parallel surge of nasty and costly TV ads as a prerequisite to gaining a state
Supreme Court seat;
➜➜ The emergence of secretive state and national campaigns to tilt state Supreme
Court elections;
➜➜ Litigation about judicial campaigns, some of which could boost special-interest
pressure on judges;
➜➜ Growing public concern about the threat to fair and impartial justice—and support for meaningful reforms.

The Money Explosion
The surge in spending is pronounced and systemic.
Campaign fundraising more than doubled, from $83.3
million in 1990–1999 to $206.9 million in 2000–2009.
Three of the last five Supreme Court election cycles
topped $45 million. All but two of the 22 states with contestable Supreme Court elections had their costliest-ever
contests in the 2000–2009 decade.

Fundraising by Supreme Court Candidates, 2000–09:

$206.9 Million

Special-interest “super spenders” played a central role in this surge. A study of 29 elections in the
nation’s 10 most costly election states shows the extraordinary power of super spender groups. The top
five spenders in each of these elections invested an average of $473,000, while the remaining 116,000
contributors averaged $850 each. In the most widely publicized case, one coal executive spent $3 mil-

See chart on super
spenders, page 10.

lion to elect a West Virginia justice. The disparity suggests that a small number of special interests
dominated judicial election spending even before the Citizens United case ended bans on election
spending by corporations and unions.
In 2007–08, five states felt the worst blast of the super spender phenomenon. When TV spending by political parties and special-interest groups is factored in, Pennsylvania broke the $10 million
barrier, while spending reached $8.5 million in Wisconsin. Texas and Alabama each topped $5 million,
and Michigan, which had just under $5 million in fundraising and independent TV ads, witnessed
some of the cycle’s most brutal campaign commercials.
Partisan races drew the most cash, but that may be changing. Candidates in partisan Supreme
Court elections raised $153.8 million nationally in 2000–09, compared with $50.9 million in nonpartisan elections (retention election candidates raised $2.2 million). But in some states, notably Wisconsin
in 2007–08 and Georgia in 2006, nonpartisan races have been just as costly and nasty as their partisan
counterparts.
Special-interest money sometimes comes with a cost. National business groups, often working with
state affiliates, were the decade’s most powerful force. But three well-funded incumbent chief justices
were ousted in 2008, in part because they were tied to special-interest patrons.
The trends continued in 2009. In Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Louisiana, candidates and independent groups spent a total of about $8.7 million on 2009 elections. And in each race, candidates accused
opponents of being ethically tainted.

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads
Spending on TV ads has helped fuel the money chase. From 2000 to 2009, an estimated $93.6
million was spent on air time for high court candidate TV ads. That total includes TV spending in
odd-numbered election years, which for the first time is included in the New Politics data.
New records were set in 2007 and 2008. Including costly 2007 elections in Wisconsin and
Pennsylvania, the 2007–08 cycle was, at $26.6 million, the most expensive biennium ever for TV ad
spending on Supreme Court races. Eight states set all-time records for spending on TV ads during the
two-year period, and there were more ad airings than ever before in 2008.
Average spending on TV continues to surge. Continuing a trend seen in 2004 and 2006, in states
where TV advertisements ran, an average of more than $1 million was spent on campaign ads. In 2008,
in the 13 states where Supreme Court ads aired, the average was $1.5 million.
Outside groups played a critical role in the TV wars. Special-interest groups and party organizations accounted for $39.3 million, more than 40 percent of the estimated TV air time purchases in
2000–09. In 2008, special-interest groups and
political parties accounted for 52 percent of all
TV spending nationally—the first time that
noncandidate groups outspent the candidates on
the ballot.

See more of this ad on page 35.

2	

Special-interest group ads are often harsher
than candidate ads. Independent groups remain
the “attack dogs” of judicial TV ads. But in
2008, Wisconsin Judge Michael Gableman’s spot
attacking Justice Louis Butler provoked lingering
ethics and legal challenges.

Executive Summary

Greater Wisconsin Committee
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce

Cente

Howard Rich

Who Played? Who Won?

Michigan Democrats
Pennsylvania Republican Committee
Illinois Democrats/Lawyers

Demo
American Justice Partnership

Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association

Tort wars have become court wars. Judicial elections
have become a multi-million-dollar duel, pitting business
And for the Sake of the Kids
and conservative groups against plaintiffs’ lawyers and
unions. High court justices know that their decisions
Illinois Republicans/Chamber of Commerce
could trigger support or retaliation in the next election.
The two sides bring starkly different profiles. TheIllinois Civil Justice League
right has brought together big-name groups like the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and National Association of
Democrats
Manufacturers, leaders of corporate giants such asTexas
Home
Depot and AIG Insurance, and political actors like Karl
Rove. Bankrollers
on the left tend to be wealthy plaintiffs’
FUNDING
IMPAC Fund
SOURCE
UNIONS
lawyers, who often
use state party organizations
to hide
UNKNOWN
the extent of their financial backing of a candidate.
Alabama Democrats/Lawyers

Natio

American Taxpayers Alliance

U.S. C

Law Enforcement Alliance of America
American Tort Reform Association
Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse

?

Secret money dominates; players can give big sums
Justice Reform Committee
with little publicity. In Alabama, theLAWYERS
Montgomery law firm of Beasley Alabama
AllenCivil
gave
more than $600,000
to Judge Deborah Bell Paseur’s unsuccessful Supreme Court campaign, without ever appearing on her
contribution records. This approach has been emulated in other states, including Texas.

Safety & Prosperity Coalition

Business Council of Alabama

See the battle for
America’s courts
unfold on page 50.

Litigation:
The Battle Inside the Courtroom
Federal courts have been increasingly pulled into state judicial election controversies, especially
in the areas of campaign finance, candidate speech and recusal (when a judge avoids a case with
potential ethical conflicts). Many of these cases are designed to strengthen or challenge rules that
would insulate judges from special-interest pressure.
The U.S. Supreme Court declared that campaign spending could disqualify a judge from cases
involving major supporters. The landmark Caperton v. Massey decision creates an incentive for every
state to craft meaningful rules for when judges must step aside.
Campaign finance laws face growing litigation challenges. North Carolina’s judicial public
financing law was upheld by the federal courts. But a more recent Supreme Court case, Citizens United
v. Federal Election Commission, overturned longstanding bans on election spending from corporate
and union treasuries—posing a special threat in judicial elections.
A 2002 Supreme Court decision, Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, loosened restrictions
on judicial campaign speech. Interest groups are using questionnaires to pressure judges into signaling courtroom decisions on the campaign trail. Professional norms are becoming more important in
helping judicial candidates steer clear of special-interest pressures and political agendas.

Campaign finance
returns to the high
court on page 62.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

3

The Public Takes Note,
Decision-Makers Play Catch-Up
Voters weigh in on
page 74.

The new politics of judicial elections has
made the public fear that justice is for sale.
More than seven in ten Americans believe that
campaign contributions affect the outcome of
courtroom decisions. Nearly half of state judges
agree. Former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor
says, “In too many states, judicial elections are
becoming political prizefights where partisans
and special interests seek to install judges who
will answer to them instead of the law and the
Constitution.”
Reform efforts are making progress. After
years of slow progress, reform gained steam in
2009. Wisconsin enacted public financing for
court races, joining North Carolina and New
Mexico, and in March 2010, West Virginia’s legislature also enacted a pilot public financing program. In Michigan, the Supreme Court adopted
tough new recusal rules. Polls show continued strong public support for reform measures—such as
public financing of judicial races, election voter guides, recusal reform and full financial disclosure
for election ads.
Merit selection has gained momentum—and more organized opposition. In a pair of 2008
county-level ballot measures, voters in Kansas and Missouri opted for appointment systems over
competitive elections for judges, while Nevada lawmakers put a merit selection measure on the 2010
ballot. Meanwhile, a cadre of groups has organized to challenge merit selection systems in several
states. And in a significant revisiting of its position, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce cited one model
of merit selection as fair and compatible with business interests.

“The improper appearance created by
money in judicial elections is one of
the most important issues facing our
judicial system today.”
—Theodore B. Olson, former U.S. Solicitor General and
attorney in Caperton v. Massey case

4	

Executive Summary

Chapter 1

The Money Explosion

In just a decade, in high court contests across
America, cash has become king. Would-be
justices must raise millions from individuals and
groups with business before the courts. Millions
more are spent by political parties and special‑interest groups, much of it undisclosed. The
money explosion is not just a threat to impartial
courts. It has left a sour taste for a majority of

Americans, who believe that campaign cash is
tilting the scales of justice.

*

Chapter 1 notes
begin on page 23.

Although warning signs were gathering in the
1990s, the new politics of judicial elections burst
on the scene with the 1999–2000 election cycle,
when Supreme Court candidates raised $45.9
million–a 62% increase over 1998.1 Since 2000,

State Supreme Court Fundraising by Biennium
89–90
91–92

$5,935,367
$9,502,350

93–94

$20,728,646

95–96

$21,378,007

97–98

$27,359,316

99–00

$45,997,238

01–02

$29,738,006

03–04

$46,108,547

05–06

$33,238,379

07–08
2009

0

$45,650,435
$7,490,080*

$10 Million

$20 Million

$30 Million

$40 Million

$50 Million

Figure 1. Non-contribution income to candidates is excluded from fundraising analyses in this report. Not counted are interest income, public
funding, repayment of loans received in previous cycles, and miscellaneous receipts such as refunds and reimbursements.
*One year only; 2010 data not available. In addition, Wisconsin Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson raised $822,104 in 2008 that she spent on
her 2009 reelection campaign. Thus, total fundraising by 2009 candidates, including Abrahamson’s 2008 money, was just more than $8.3
million.

Total Supreme Court Fundraising Ranked by State, 2000–2009
Alabama
Pennsylvania*
Ohio
Illinois*
Texas
Michigan
Mississippi
Nevada
Louisiana
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Washington
North Carolina**
Georgia
Kentucky
Montana*

19 Candidates Raised $2,535,566
18 Candidates Raised $2,416,704
19 Candidates Raised $1,932,946
20 Candidates Raised $939,122
10 Candidates Raised $627,211
6 Candidates Raised $614,589
1 Candidate Raised $225,298
1 Candidate Raised $70,700 in Retention Elections
2 Candidates Raised $13,925 in Nonpartisan Elections
3 Candidates Raised $7,500 in Retention Elections
1 Candidate Raised $15 in Retention Elections

Oregon
Arkansas**
Minnesota
Idaho
New Mexico*
California
Alaska
North Dakota
Florida
South Dakota

0

$10 Million

24 Candidates Raised
$6,691,852
45 Candidates Raised
$5,294,492
36 Candidates Raised
$5,044,857
21 Candidates Raised
$3,773,428
19 Candidates Raised
$3,504,289
$20 Million

Figure 2.
*Four states—Illinois, Montana, New Mexico and Pennsylvania—have hybrid systems that use more than one process to select and retain high court judges. In addition, the American Judicature Society lists Michigan and Ohio
as partisan election states, because candidates are nominated through party primaries and conventions. For full
details, see the AJS Judicial Selection in the States section, www.ajs.org.

6	

The Money Explosion

Totals:

537***
Candidates Raised
$206,941,244****
26 Candidates Raised
$21,319,171

45 Candidates Raised
$40,964,590

34 Candidates Raised
$21,212,389
20 Candidates Raised
$20,655,924
44 Candidates Raised
$19,197,826
22 Candidates Raised
$12,878,776
34 Candidates Raised
$10,837,071
35 Candidates Raised
$9,848,192
17 Candidates Raised
$8,950,146
15 Candidates Raised
$7,384,664

$30 Million

Type of Election
Partisan
Partisan/Retention
Nonpartisan
Nonpartisan/Retention
Retention

$40 Million

** Arkansas and North Carolina held partisan elections for high court through 2000. Both switched to nonpartisan elections in 2002.
***Reflects the number of names appearing on the ballot for voters to choose among. For instance, where the
same candidate has appeared on the ballot in three separate elections, he or she is listed as three candidates.
**** Includes money raised by candidates for elections in future years, as well as candidates who withdrew
before an election was held.
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

7

Contributions by Sector, 2000–2009 High Court Elections
Business
$62,589,165

Candidate Contributions
$17,177,609

Lawyers/Lobbyists
$59,272,198

Organized Labor
$6,704,944

Unknown/Unitemized
$28,285,736

Other*
$6,473,384

Political Party
$22,168,234

Ideology/Single issue
$4,269,974

Total Contributions:

Figure 3.
* Other includes:
Retired persons,
civil servants, local
or municipal elected
officials, tribal governments, clergy,
nonprofits, and military persons.

expensive campaigns have become all but essential for a candidate to reach the high court.
From 2000–09, Supreme Court candidates
raised $206.9 million nationally, more than double the $83.3 million raised from 1990–1999 (by
comparison, the consumer price index rose only
25 percent from 2000–2009). During the earlier
decade, 26 Supreme Court campaigns raised
$1 million or more, and all but two came from
three states: Alabama, Pennsylvania and Texas.
In 2000–09, by contrast, there were 66 “milliondollar” campaigns, in a dozen states. During
the same 2000–2009 period, 20 of the 22 states
that elect Supreme Court judges set spending
records; only Texas and North Dakota had their
highest-spending elections in the 1990s.
In other words, the most remarkable thing about
the 2007–08 cycle—in which state Supreme
Court candidates raised $45.6 million2, seven

$206,941,244

times the 1989–90 total—was that such totals
have become so unremarkable. It was the third
time in the last five cycles that high court
candidates raised more than $45 million ($46.8
million was raised in the high-water 2003–2004
election cycle).3
Bulging campaign war chests are only part of
the story. Millions more dollars have flowed
into judicial elections from political parties
and special-interest groups, frequently in ways
crafted to avoid financial disclosure even as they
seek to sway judicial contests. From 2000–09,
independent groups and political parties spent
at least $39.3 million on television time, about
42 percent of total ad costs.4 (The real totals
are likely substantially higher. For details, see
Chapter 2, Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack
Ads.)

“In a close race, the judge who solicits the most money from
lawyers and their clients has the upper hand. But then the
day of reckoning comes. When you appear before a court,
you ask how much your lawyer gave to the judge’s campaign.
If the opposing counsel gave more, you are cynical.”
—Wallace
Jefferson, Chief Justice of the Texas Supreme Court
8	

The Money Explosion

Rise of
the Super
Spenders
The Citizens United decision, which struck down
bans on corporate election spending, has sparked
debate on whether unlimited special-interest
money will fundamentally change the election
process. A close look at state judicial elections
in 2000–09 suggests such a transformation has
already begun.
Much of the cash boom in the last decade was
fueled by a new class of super spenders. These
special interests, including business executives,
unions and lawyers who are stakeholders in
litigation, can dominate contributions to candidates, year after year, and/or go outside the
system by spending millions on independent TV
ad campaigns.5
For big money interests, high court seats are just
one more investment. As an Ohio AFL-CIO
official put it, “We figured out a long time ago
that it’s easier to elect seven judges than to elect
132 legislators.”6 When those big-dollar supporters appear before the very judges whom they
helped elect, many Americans conclude that
justice is not impartial.
A review of 10 states with the highest judicial
campaign costs shows two separate worlds—a
small coterie of organized super spenders who
dominate election financing, and a large number
of small contributors who simply cannot keep
up. (See chart, pages 10 and 11.) Of equal concern, a large number of justices in those states
owe their elections to a few key benefactors.
The yawning gap is best shown by 29 contested elections held from 2000–09 in Alabama,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Texas, Michigan,
Mississippi, Wisconsin, Nevada, and West
Virginia. In these elections, at least one candidate benefited from $1 million or more in other
people’s money—either in direct contributions
or through independent election spending by
other groups that benefited their campaigns.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

When all 29 elections are taken together, the
top five super spenders from each election—145
in all—spent an average of $473,000 apiece. By
contrast, the remaining donors averaged $850.
Excluding self-financing candidates, the 145
super spenders accounted for just over 40 percent
of all campaign cash in the 29 elections.
Moreover, the disparity was widespread, not just
the result of a few outlier contests. In 22 of 29
elections, the top five spenders averaged more
than $200,000 apiece—and in 12 elections, they
exceeded $500,000. In 21 of 29 elections, a mere
five spenders accounted for at least 25 percent
of all campaign funding. In nine elections,
five super spenders accounted for more than 50
percent, exceeding thousands of contributors
combined.
In a potential harbinger of the post-Citizens
United world, almost all super spenders in
the 29 elections were organizations, some with
documented backing from corporations, unions
or plaintiffs’ lawyers. Of 55 top five spenders that
exceeded $100,000 one or more times, only one
was an individual: Don Blankenship, whose $3
million expenditure on the 2004 West Virginia
election led to the landmark Caperton v. Massey
case.
But even that case raised a question: If the
Citizens United ruling had been issued before
2004, allowing Blankenship to dip into the
treasury of Massey Energy Co. instead of his
own personal funds, how much more might he
have spent?

The Threat to Justice
As expensive as these races have become, their
real cost to the justice system is more profound. Americans believe that justice is for
sale. Numerous polls show that three in four
Americans believe campaign cash affects courtroom decisions.

More information
@justiceatstake.org

Indeed, judges themselves—who take an oath
to treat parties impartially—are delivering
their own warnings. In a 2009 brief to the
U.S. Supreme Court, the Conference of Chief
Justices, which represents 57 chief justices from
every state and U.S. territory, wrote: “As judicial
9

Super Spenders and What They Spent
Greatest Expenditures by One Source on a Single Court Election, 2000–2009

$4.4 Million, Ohio 2000

U.S. Chamber and Ohio Affiliates

$3 Million, West Virginia 2004

Don Blankenship
coal industry executive

$2.8 Million, Illinois 2004

Illinois Democratic Party
with plaintiffs' lawyer backing

$2.4 Million, Alabama 2000

Alabama Democratic Party
with plaintiffs' lawyer backing
Illinois Republican Party/
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
ad blitz underwritten
by business group

$1.9 Million, Illinois 2004
0

$1 Million

Super Spenders, Versus Other Donors: 29 High Court Elections, 2000–2009
Self-financing by candidates
$6,644,247

Average Non-Super
Spender Donor
(excluding
self-financing
candidates)

$850

Total of 145 expenditures
by Super Spenders in
29 elections, 2000-09:
$68,683,472

All Other Donors

Total spent by 116,600 other donors:
$99,187,112

Super Spenders
Self-Financed

Average
Super Spender

10	

The Money Explosion

0

$100,000

$200,000

$2 Million

$3 Million

$4 Million

Total Spending in 29 Supreme Court Elections, 2000–09:

$174,514,881

Figure 4. This chart shows estimated total spending in 29 contested Supreme Court elections from 2000 to 2009—including contributions,
self-financing by candidates and independent spending by groups not affiliated with candidates. All contested elections were selected in 10
high-spending states in which at least one candidate was aided by $1 million or more from others, either in the form of contributions or independent expenditures. The states are Alabama, Illinois, Michigan, Mississippi, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

With three exceptions, all data are compiled from two sources. Campaign contribution data are from the National Institute on Money in State
Politics, www.followthemoney.org, and independent TV spending data are provided by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG. In three elections, more
detailed records were available, and those sources are used. A lawsuit against the U.S. Chamber of Commerce after the Ohio 2000 election
disclosed $4.4 million in spending. In papers filed with the state of West Virginia, Don Blankenship disclosed spending $3 million on that
state’s 2004 Supreme Court election. State finance records for the Improve Mississippi PAC in 2008 also were used.

$473,679
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

$300,000

11

$400,000

$500,000

*In 2009, the
Pennsylvania
Republican Party
ran an estimated
$975,849 in non-candidate ads under its
own name. Following
the campaign, the
party donated the ad
expenditures as inkind contributions to
the Joan Orie Melvin
campaign. To avoid
double-counting,
those ad costs are
listed here only as
contributions to the
Melvin campaign.
**In 2004, the Illinois
parties and two
political action committees aired an estimated $5.8 million
in non-candidate ads
under their respective organizational
names. Following the
campaign, the four
groups donated the
ad expenditures as
in-kind contributions
to the Lloyd Karmeier
and Gordon Maag
campaigns. To avoid
double-counting,
those ad costs are
listed here only as
contributions to the
candidates.

Total Spending for Top 10 States, 2000–2009 High Court Elections

State

Candidate
Contributions

Non-candidate
TV spending

Total Spending
2000–09

Alabama

$40,964,590

$2,622,580

$43,587,170

Ohio

$21,212,389

$8,622,603

$29,834,992

Pennsylvania*

$21,319,171

$1,334,711

$22,653,882

Texas

$19,197,826

$1,519,241

$20,717,067

Illinois**

$20,655,924

$39,428

$20,695,352

Michigan

$12,878,776

$5,724,667

$18,603,443

Mississippi

$10,837,071

$1,247,703

$12,084,774

Wisconsin

$$6,691,852

$4,848,367

$11,540,219

Nevada

$9,848,192

$39,929

$9,888,121

W. Virginia

$7,384,664

$2,181,468

$9,566,132

Figure 5.

election campaigns become costlier and more
politicized, public confidence in the fairness and
integrity of the nation’s elected judges may be
imperiled.”7
In a 2001 poll of state judges, almost half—
46 percent—agreed that campaign donations
influence judicial decisions.8 Most elected high
court justices cited pressure to raise campaign
money during their election years. In 2006 Ohio
Supreme Court justice Paul Pfeifer told the New
York Times, “I never felt so much like a hooker
down by the bus station. . . as I did in a judicial
race. Everyone interested in contributing has
very specific interests. They mean to be buying
a vote.”9
Wallace Jefferson, Chief Justice of the Texas
Supreme Court, warned in 2009: “In a close
race, the judge who solicits the most money from
lawyers and their clients has the upper hand.
But then the day of reckoning comes. When
you appear before a court, you ask how much
your lawyer gave to the judge’s campaign. If the
opposing counsel gave more, you are cynical.”10

12	

The new politics of judicial elections arrived
at the U.S. Supreme Court in the 2009 case
Caperton v. Massey. The case, in which coal
executive Don Blankenship spent $3 million to
help elect Judge Brent Benjamin to the West
Virginia Supreme Court in 2004, while his company appealed a $50 million jury award given
to a competing coal company, crystallized the
threat to due process when seven-figure judicial
campaign supporters have business before the
courts. When Justice Benjamin cast the tiebreaking vote to overturn the jury award, Hugh
Caperton, owner of Harman Mining Corp.,
said his company’s right to a fair and impartial
tribunal had been violated.
In the end, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed.
Ordering Justice Benjamin to remove himself
from the case, the court for the first time
ruled that campaign spending could threaten
a litigant’s due-process rights: “Blankenship’s
extraordinary contributions were made at a time
when he had a vested stake in the outcome,”
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for the
majority. “Just as no man is allowed to be a judge
in his own cause, similar fears of bias can arise
The Money Explosion

Top U.S. Super Spenders, 2000–2009 High Court Elections
Spender

Candidate
Contributions

Non-Candidate
Spending

Total

Linkage

U.S. Chamber/Ohio Affiliates

$49,000

$7,560,168

$7,609,168

U.S. Chamber of
Commerce

Alabama Democratic Party

$5,460,117

$0

$5,460,117

Conduit/Plaintiffs’
lawyers

Business Council of Alabama

$4,633,534

$0

$4,633,534

U.S. Chamber, NAM

Illinois Democratic Party

$3,765,920*

$0

$3,765,920

Conduit/Plaintiffs’
lawyers

Michigan Chamber of Commerce

$164,140

$2,875,965

$3,040,105

U.S. Chamber

Don Blankenship

$3,000

$2,978,207

$2,981,207

Massey Energy Co.

Alabama Civil Justice Reform
Committee

$2,474,905

$224,463

$2,699,568

Insurance money

Michigan Democratic Party

$219,142

$2,467,121

$2,686,263

Unions, plaintiffs'
lawyers

Pennsylvania Republican Party

$2,274,534*

$387,300

$2,661,834

Conservative groups,
donors

Michigan Republican Party

$217,233

$2,420,328

$2,637,561

Business executives

Total, Top 10 Spenders,
2000–2009

$19,261,525

$18,913,752

$38,175,277

Democratic/Plaintiff Lawyers/
Unions

$9,445,179

$2,467,121

$11,912,300

Republican/Business/
Conservative

$9,816,346

$16,446,631

$26,262,977

Philadelphia Trial Lawyers
Association

$2,398,300

$0

$2,398,300

Plaintiffs’ lawyers

American Justice Partnership

$300,000

$1,800,000

$2,100,000

National Association
of Manufacturers

Wisconsin Manufacturers &
Commerce

$9,600

$2,012,748

$2,022,348

U.S. Chamber, NAM

Illinois Republican Party

$1,981,714*

$0

$1,981,714

U.S. Chamber, insurance company money

Center for Individual Freedom

$0

$1,824,140

$1,824,140

Ad money sources
unknown; big tobacco
ties

Greater Wisconsin Committee

$0

$1,736,535

$1,736,535

Union backing

American Taxpayers Alliance

$0

$1,293,080

$1,293,080

U.S. Chamber money

Law Enforcement Alliance of
America

$0

$924,075

$924,075

National Rifle
Association

Other Notable Top Spenders

Figure 6.
*Includes money spent on party-sponsored TV ads that were listed as in-kind contributions to candidates
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

13

Supreme Court Fundraising:
Partisan, Nonpartisan and Retention Elections

$153.8 Million

$50.9 Million

$2.2 Million
Retention

Figure 7.

Nonpartisan

Partisan

when—without the other parties’ consent—a
man chooses the judge in his own cause.”11

How We Got Here
American history has no precedent for the
financial arms race that threatens to overwhelm
our courts of law. Until the 1990s, state Supreme
Court races were typically low-key and lowbudget. As a nationwide battle over tort reform
heated up, battles over jury awards and product
liability standards pitted pro-business groups
against plaintiffs’ lawyers and labor unions.
Candidate fundraising for court races saw successive spikes, from an estimated $5.9 million in
1989–90 to $21.4 million in 1995–96. In 2000,
candidate fundraising abruptly doubled again,
to $45.9 million. From 1999–2000 through
2007–08, the average fundraising for each twoyear election cycle has been $40.1 million, compared with $16.9 million the decade before.

14	

One factor had a particular impact. Although
special-interest spending had traditionally been
a factor at the state level, national groups dramatically increased their involvement in statewide elections. In 2000, the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce announced it was stepping up its
involvement in Supreme Court elections, by
allocating up to $10 million to as many as seven
states where the Chamber said plaintiffs’ lawyers
had too much influence.
By the end of 2002, unprecedented amounts
of money poured into court races from both
sides of the tort wars. The U.S. Chamber of
Commerce and allied forces had begun winning
a string of victories.12 Of the top 10 election
spenders nationally in 2000–09, seven had
business or expressly Republican leanings, while
three had plaintiffs’ lawyer and Democratic
backing. Including independent TV ads by noncandidate groups, the top conservative/business
spenders invested $26.2 million—considerably
more than double the $11.9 million spent by
three Democratic-leaning spenders. The new
flood of money from both sides fed voter cynicism and fueled campaign-trail accusations that
judges were beholden to their election backers.
Although national business groups, often working with state-level affiliates, remained the
decade’s most powerful force, by 2008 signs of a
potential counter-trend emerged, as chief justices
with high-level business backing were voted off
the bench in Michigan, Mississippi and West
Virginia.
Partisan elections traditionally draw more
money than nonpartisan races, but that may be
changing.13 Through much of the decade, states
with nonpartisan elections, especially those with
smaller populations, had escaped the worst
excesses. Overall, candidates in 13 nonpartisan
states raised $50.9 million in 2000–09, about
25 percent of the total, compared with nearly
$153.8 million raised by candidates in nine partisan states, about 74 percent of all fundraising.
Retention election candidates raised $2.2 million, about 1 percent.14
Large infusions of cash from special-interest
groups showed that the nonpartisan label offered
decreasing insulation against big-money campaigns. Including both candidate contributions
The Money Explosion

and independent TV ads by parties and specialinterest groups, Georgia’s 2006 election cost $3.6
million. In Wisconsin, spending from all sources
on two elections in 2007 and 2008 totaled $8.5
million—seven times as much as all Wisconsin
Supreme Court elections put together from
2000 through 2006. National and state-level
super spender groups played major roles in both
states.

The Rise of the Super
Spenders: Alabama
Super spenders—groups that repeatedly overwhelm all other givers in state Supreme Court
elections—have been key factors in most states
where election costs rose sharply in 2000–2009.
Possibly the most extreme example is Alabama,
where a select club of state and national special
interests emerged to bankroll Supreme Court
elections and fundamentally reshape the court.
In 1994, as Republicans mounted one of their
first major efforts to win control of the Alabama
Supreme Court, law professor Harold F. See Jr.
raised $509,783 in a losing effort, and only seven
of his contributions were greater than $5,000.
Just two years later, he raised nearly $2.7 million
and won. Nine of his top 10 donors were business
PACs, led by the Business Council of Alabama
($331,000) and the Alabama Forestry Association
($105,000).15
For Alabama, the 1990s were a prelude to a surge
in spending by single-interest groups and politi-

cal parties. The Business Council gave $480,500
to Bernard Harwood in 2000 (29 percent of his
total); $540,000 to Michael Bolin in 2004 (32
percent of his total fundraising); and $600,000
to losing chief-justice candidate Drayton Nabers
in 2006. That same year, the Alabama Civil
Justice Reform Committee gave $842,825 to
Nabers, and the Lawsuit Reform PAC gave
Nabers $443,000.
By 2009, after Justice See retired, the court had
been reshaped into a far more business-friendly
tribunal. The Business Council of Alabama/
Progress PAC was a top five contributor for seven
of Alabama’s nine justices who stood for election during the decade. Three other PACs—the
Alabama Civil Justice Reform Committee, the
Alabama Automobile Dealers Association and
the Lawsuit Reform PAC of Alabama—were
top five contributors to five justices. A fifth
PAC—the Pro Business Pac—was a top five
contributor to four Alabama justices.
In 2006, after Republicans had captured every
seat on Alabama’s high court, challenger Sue
Bell Cobb led a Democratic Party resurgence.
She was equally dependent on large-scale backers, though she relied on a different group of
funders. Justice Cobb received 32.3 percent of
her $2.62 million from two sources: Franklin
PAC ($638,000), run by a Montgomery lobbyist,
and the state Democratic Party ($209,700). In
2008, Judge Deborah Bell Paseur, who narrowly
lost her bid to replace Justice See, received $1.66
million—61.5 percent of her total—from one

“Alabama is first in the country in money
spent on judicial races, and last in
funding legal access for the poor.
I am embarrassed.”
—J. Mark White, former president of the Alabama State Bar

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

15

source, the state Democratic Party. A review of
campaign records showed that plaintiffs’ lawyers
accounted for most of the Democratic money.
(See “Shell Game on the Left?” page 46.)
Not coincidentally, the super spender groups
made Alabama home to the nation’s most expensive state Supreme Court elections, even though
it is only the nation’s 23rd most populous state.
Candidates in Alabama raised $40.9 million in
2000–09, nearly double the next most costly
state, Pennsylvania (where candidates raised
$21.3 million).

Supreme Court Super
Spenders in Other States
Alabama’s judicial politics are extreme, but a
similar story has been repeated elsewhere. Both
in 2007–08, and over the 2000–09 decade,
the most expensive campaigns in other states
overwhelmingly involved tales of super spenders,
both as campaign contributors and sponsors of
independent ads. The same players often reappear, again and again.
In 2007–08, Pennsylvania had the highest total
cost: about $10.3 million, including $9.5 million in candidate fundraising, led by $913,500
from the Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association,
and an estimated $858,000 in independent TV
ad spending by the Virginia-based Center for
Individual Freedom. The state GOP and triallawyers association led the way in 2009, with the
GOP spending about $1.4 million for Joan Orie
Melvin and the trial lawyers contributing $1.2
million to Democrat Jack Panella.
In Wisconsin, which ranked second in 2007–08
with a total of $8.5 million in fundraising and independent TV ads, an explosion in special-interest
money was led by Wisconsin Manufacturers
& Commerce and the labor-friendly Greater

Wisconsin Committee. Alabama was third in
2007–08, at $5.4 million when accounting for
contributions and independent TV spending,
again by the Center for Individual Freedom.
Other top-spending states included Michigan,
Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, West Virginia and
Nevada.

Triumph of the Super
Spenders: Illinois
Perhaps no race in the last decade better showed
the potential of a super spender takeover than
the 2004 Illinois race between Lloyd Karmeier
and Gordon Maag. The two ran in a semi-rural
district in southwestern Illinois, which had
few local resources to fund a costly court race.
But the local Madison County court had been
branded a “judicial hellhole” by the American
Tort Reform Association, which was unhappy
about jury awards and class-action litigation
against national corporations in the county.
A study by the Illinois Campaign for Political
Reform showed the players whose money found
its way to southwestern Illinois that autumn.
Karmeier’s supporters included the U.S. and
Illinois Chambers of Commerce (which together
spent a total of more than $2 million), the
American Tort Reform Association (which spent
$515,000), and multiple insurance and medical
organizations. Contributing to Maag were a
broad array of Illinois plaintiffs’ lawyers, funneling their money through the state Democratic
Party. Altogether, the candidates raised $9.3
million, including multi-million-dollar media
buys by the state parties and other groups.16
The amount, still a national record for a twocandidate race, was almost identical to the
combined estimate of the amount raised for all
races nationally just 12 years earlier.

“That’s obscene for a judicial race. What does it gain people?
How can people have faith in the system?”
—Illinois Justice Lloyd Karmeier, after winning $9.3 million 2004 election
16	

The Money Explosion

Total Supreme Court Spending: Top 10 States, 2007–08
Figure 8.

State

Candidate Money

Independent TV

Total Spending

Pennsylvania

$9,464,975

$858,611

$10,323,586

Wisconsin (07 & 08)

$3,876,595

$4,642,659

$8,519,254

Alabama

$4,472,621

$965,529

$5,438,150

Texas

$4,310,923

$904,978

$5,215,901

Michigan

$2,614,260

$2,370,260

$4,984,520

Louisiana

$3,686,879

$306,120

$3,992,999

Mississippi

$2,976,446

$860,532

$3,836,978

West Virginia

$3,303,380

$479,255

$3,782,635

Nevada

$3,135,214

$0

$3,135,214

Ohio

$2,448,388

$684,623

$3,133,011

Money: Focus on 2007–08
Five States Lead the List

In 2007–08, 84 candidates on the ballot for state
Supreme Court seats raised $43.8 million and
five states set fundraising records.17 But the full
blast of the super spender phenomenon was felt
especially in five states, where a combination of
candidate fundraising and independent ads shattered records, and in two states sent advertising
to new lows of personal assault.
The states experiencing the greatest specialinterest spending in 2007–08 were Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin, Michigan, Alabama and Texas.
Based purely on candidate fundraising records,
Pennsylvania’s 2007 race was easily the nation’s
biggest blowout in 2007–08. The $9.5 million
raised by eight general and primary election
candidates more than doubled the state’s previous record of $4.1 million. Other fundraising
records were set in Louisiana, Nevada, West
Virginia and Wisconsin (in 2007). Chief Justice
Cliff Taylor set an individual fundraising record
in Michigan, but still lost—due in part to a
Democratic Party TV blitz. Likewise, Democrats
set a TV spending record in Texas.
The numbers are even higher when independent
TV ad spending is factored in.18 For instance,
an estimated $858,611 campaign by the VirginiaThe New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

based Center for Individual Freedom helped
push Pennsylvania’s total spending to $10.3
million.
The increase was almost as startling in Wisconsin.
Candidates raised $3.8 million in the 2007 and
2008 elections, the nation’s fourth-highest total
for the election cycle, but that was just the
beginning of the story. An estimated $4.6 million was spent on independent campaign activity, very possibly a conservative estimate. That
raised total spending to $8.5 million, making
Wisconsin the second costliest state in 2007–08.
Likewise, Michigan ranks only ninth in candidate fundraising, but rises to fifth when an
estimated $2.37 million in special-interest group
and political party TV ads are factored in.
Examining independent expenditures underscores the real impact of institutional super
spenders playing in the 2007–08 elections, in
a way that official candidate finance records
cannot. Looking only at candidate fundraising reports shows that the top 10 contributors,
excluding self-financing candidates, nationally gave an average of $514,098 each. When
adding in estimates of non-candidate group
expenditures on TV ads, the average surges to
$1,234,880. All of the top 10 super spenders in
2007–08 were institutional, such as PACs and
independent special-interest groups—although,
17

Top 10 Supreme Court Super Spenders, 2007–08

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
TV Spending

Total

State, National
Links

Wisconsin
Manufacturers &
Commerce

$8,100

$2,012,748

$2,020,848

U.S. Chamber, NAM

Wisconsin,
2007–2008

Center for Individual
Freedom

$0

$1,824,140

$1,824,140

Big Tobacco, money
sources unknown

Pennsylvania 2007,
Alabama 2008

Alabama Democratic $1,661,550
Party

$0

$1,661,550

Plaintiffs’ lawyers

Alabama 2008

Greater Wisconsin
Committee

$0

$1,430,807

$1,430,807

Labor Unions,
Democratic leadership

Wisconsin,
2007–2008

Michigan
Democratic Party

$64,259

$1,164,132

$1,228,391

Heavy Labor, Plaintiffs’
Lawyer Support

Michigan 2008

Texas Democratic
Party

$36,000

$904,978

$940,978

Plaintiffs’ Lawyers

Texas 2008

Philadelphia Trial
Lawyers Assn

$913,500

$0

$913,500

Plaintiffs’ Lawyers

Pennsylvania 2007

Michigan Chamber
of Commerce

$34,000

$804,869

$838,869

U.S. Chamber

Michigan 2008

Pennsylvania
Republican Party

$805,094

$0

$805,094

Conservative groups,
leaders

Pennsylvania 2007

Partnership for
Ohio’s Future

$0

$684,623

$684,623

U.S., Ohio Chambers

Ohio 2008

Total, Top 10
Spenders,
2007–08

$3,522,503

$8,826,297

$12,348,800

$522,650
Average, Top 10
spender, 2007–08

$882,629

$1,234,880

Democratic/Plaintiff
Lawyers/Unions

$2,675,309

$3,499,917

$6,175,226

Republican/
Business/
Conservative

$847,194

$5,326,380

$6,173,574

Spender

States/Years

Figure 9.

18	

The Money Explosion

Contributions by Sector, 2007–08 High Court Elections

Lawyers/Lobbyists
$13,357,016

Political Party
$3,697,062

Business
$9,458,741

Organized Labor
$2,337,629

Unknown/Unitemized
$7,361,095

Other*
$2,310,228

Candidate Contributions
$6,499,281

Ideology/Single Issue
$629,383

Total Contributions:

$45,650,435
as Massey Coal CEO Don Blankenship showed
in the 2004 West Virginia election, individual
super spenders can have significant impact.
The nation’s top super spender in 2007–08 was
the Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce’s
PAC, which spent an estimated total of $2,020,848
on the state’s 2007 and 2008 elections. Three
Democratic state committees also were in the
top 10. In previous years, plaintiffs’ lawyers have
been identified as underwriting Democratic ad
blitzes, and published reports in Alabama and
Texas suggested the same in 2008.
A summary of the top super spenders reveals
one interesting distinction. For the decade as a
whole, conservative/business groups dominated
the top 10 election-spenders list, occupying seven
slots and outspending more liberal opponents
by 2 to 1. But in 2007–08, there was a virtual
financial standoff. There were five super spender
groups from each end of the spectrum, with each
side totaling just over $6 million apiece.
In Wisconsin, independent groups played a
critical role in the defeat of Justice Louis Butler.
Three groups in particular led the way, bankrolling many of the television ads attacking
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Justice Butler. Together, the Club for Growth,
Coalition for America’s Families and Wisconsin
Manufacturers & Commerce spent a total of
$2,118,807 on TV ads in the 2008 ButlerGableman race.
Michigan was not far behind. The state parties
and the Chamber of Commerce spent an estimated $2.4 million on TV ads, twice as much
as the candidates themselves. (Locally gathered
data, which included cable TV ads and small
TV markets, suggested much higher totals in
both Wisconsin and Michigan. For example, the
Michigan Campaign Finance Network reported
$3.8 million in independent TV ads in 2008.)19

Figure 10.
*Other includes
retired persons, civil
servants, local or
municipal elected
officials, tribal governments, clergy,
nonprofits, and military persons.

Chief Justice Cliff Taylor raised nearly $1.9 million, breaking the record of $1.3 million he set in
2000, while challenger Diane Hathaway raised
$754,000. But more money did not spell victory.
Taylor, whose reelection was backed by a total
of $3.1 million in spending, including Chamber
and GOP ads, lost by 10 points to Hathaway.
Her total spending, including Democratic ads,
was $1.9 million.

19

Figure 11.

Supreme Court Fundraising by Candidates on Ballot, 2007–08

State

Contested or
Retention

Number of
Candidates
on Ballot

Total Raised

Pennsylvania

Partisan/Retention*

8

$9,464,975

Alabama

Partisan

2

$4,472,621

Texas

Partisan

8

$4,310,923

Wisconsin

Nonpartisan

5

$3,876,595

Louisiana

Partisan

5

$3,686,879

West Virginia

Partisan

5

$3,303,480

Nevada

Nonpartisan

6

$3,135,214

Mississippi

Nonpartisan

9

$2,976,446

Michigan

Partisan

2

$2,614,260

Ohio

Partisan

4

$2,448,388

Illinois

Partisan

1

$1,091,092

Kentucky

Nonpartisan

4

$515,711

Washington

Nonpartisan

6

$417,034

Georgia

Nonpartisan

2

$389,102

Montana

Nonpartisan/Retention*

3

$334,446

Idaho

Nonpartisan

2

$243,190

Minnesota

Nonpartisan

5

$196,402

North Carolina

Nonpartisan

2

$178,273

Arkansas

Nonpartisan

2

$86,635

New Mexico

Partisan

1

$51,656

Oregon

Nonpartisan

2

$7,525

84

$43,800,847**

TOTAL

* In Pennsylvania, justices initially are elected to court seats, then face retention elections. In Montana, justices
face retention elections if no challengers enter a competitive nonpartisan election.
** Does not include money raised by candidates for future election cycles. When including future elections, a
total of $45.6 million was raised in 2007–08.

20	

The Money Explosion

Other States of Note in
2007–08
In Alabama, more than $5.4 million was spent,
with candidates raising a total of more than
$4.4 million and the Virginia-based Center
for Individual Freedom (CFIF) spending an
estimated $965,529 in TV ads. The extra air
time helped boost Republican Greg Shaw,
who narrowly defeated Democrat Deborah
Bell Paseur. Just four groups accounted for 61
percent of all contributions and independent
expenditures—$3,316,358 of the $5,438,150 spent
in Alabama. Those groups were the Alabama
Democratic Party ($1,661,550 in contributions),
CFIF ($965,529 in TV ads), Alabama Civil
Justice Reform Committee ($434,079 in contributions), and the Business Council of Alabama
($275,200 in contributions).
In Mississippi, one out-of-state group, the Law
Enforcement Alliance of America, spent more
on TV ads, an estimated $660,472, than all the
other candidates and independent groups put
together. The alliance had mounted a similar
campaign in 2002 to knock off Justice Chuck
McRae. Also running ads were Mississippians
for Economic Progress, traditionally a funnel
for U.S. Chamber of Commerce money. And
IMPAC, a campaign arm of the Business &
Industry Political Education Committee that
ran an independent campaign supporting Chief
Justice Jim Smith, received a $125,000 check
from the National Association of Manufacturersrelated American Justice Partnership. Justice
Smith suffered a surprise defeat to Jim Kitchens
and was voted out of office.20
West Virginia experienced a significant shot of
independent TV money from the state Chamber
of Commerce, amounting to nearly a halfmillion in estimated ad-time purchases. And
during a West Virginia primary, an ad patterned
after “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” mockingly showed pictures of Chief Justice Elliott
“Spike” Maynard vacationing on the Riviera
with Don Blankenship, the coal executive at the
heart of the Caperton v. Massey case. Maynard
was defeated.
In Nevada, newly elected Justice Kris Pickering
was her own biggest backer, supplying 50 percent
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

of her $1.3 million in fundraising, as she and
Mark Gibbons were elected. The MGM Mirage
casino, a regular player in Nevada Supreme
Court elections, placed winning bets on both
candidates. The $3,135,214 raised by candidates
marked the third straight election in which contributions totaled in the multi-millions, and it
narrowly broke the previous mark, set in 2004.
Based solely on candidate fundraising records
(See chart, Page 20), the most expensive campaign
totals in 2007–08 occurred in Pennsylvania, followed by Alabama, Texas and Wisconsin.
While candidates must list the sources of their
money, many independent groups do not.
Inevitably, some of the groups embroiled in
controversy were also the most mysterious. Who,
for instance, funded the Center for Individual
Freedom’s $965,000 TV ad campaign backing
Alabama’s Greg Shaw, or its $858,611 campaign in 2007 pushing Maureen Lally-Green in
Pennsylvania? Ads by opponent Deborah Bell
Paseur suggested that it was “the likes of the oil
and gas industry” that bankrolled the Virginiabased group, but the charge was unproven. The
Center, whose origins date back to the BigTobacco funded National Smokers Alliance, has
refused to disclose its funders.
And who ultimately paid for $660,000 in
air time purchased by the Law Enforcement
Alliance of America, in its attempt to unseat
Mississippi Justice Oliver Diaz, Jr.? The group,
also based in Virginia, has been linked in published reports to the National Rifle Association
and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. But
because Mississippi’s governor vetoed a 2005 bill
that would have required independent groups
to disclose their financial sources for election
expenditures, it was impossible to know where
the group got its money.

2009 High Court Elections:
Costly Trends Continue
Continuing established trends, state Supreme
Court elections remained costly and negative in 2009. Total candidate contributions in
Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Louisiana exceeded $8.3 million, and non-candidate groups spent

21

“The influence of big money in judicial
elections has exploded in this decade,
and it’s something we have to pay
attention to because it has totally
eroded public confidence in the
judicial system.”
—Governor Edward Rendell of Pennsylvania

an estimated $305,000 in independent TV ads,
bringing total spending to $8.7 million.
More information
@justiceatstake.org

In Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, candidates
faced accusations of special-interest ties, which
reflected growing public concerns about the
impact of campaign cash and the unsavory
loyalties such money implies among judges and
campaign supporters.
In Pennsylvania, Democrat Jack Panella broke a
state record for individual fund-raising but still
lost to Republican Joan Orie Melvin. According
to state data, Judge Panella raised 2,706,137,
more than the $2.3 million raised and spent by
the state’s previous record setter, Justice Seamus
McCaffery in 2007.
Judge Orie Melvin lambasted Panella for taking $1.2 million from the Philadelphia Trial
Lawyers Association. In October, she told the
Pennsylvania Press Club: “Is it pay-to-play? Is it
justice for sale? I don’t know, but it sure sounds
suspect.”21
But Orie Melvin’s final campaign records
showed the gap between her fund-raising and
Panella’s was much narrower than she’d suggested. Although she reported raising only $942,978
during the campaign, she later reported receiving more than $1.4 million in in-kind contributions from the state Republican Party, raising
her total funding to $2,479,507—a total that also
broke McCaffery’s 2007 record. Total campaign
fundraising by all of Pennsylvania’s general and
primary election candidates in 2009 was $5.4
million.

22	

The Republican backing, mainly in the form of
pro-Melvin TV ads aired under the GOP label,
was confirmed by TNS Media Intelligence/
CMAG estimates, which showed more than
$975,000 in state party ads.22
In Wisconsin, ads by Judge Randy Koschnick
attacked Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson for
not recusing herself from a case involving relatively modest campaign contributors. Abrahamson
won easily, both in the fund-raising battle and
among voters. The $1,452,000 she raised, compared with just $171,000 for Koschnick, broke
(albeit narrowly) a record set in 2007 by Justice
Annette Ziegler. Nearly $306,000 in TV ads,
spent by the Greater Wisconsin Committee on
Abrahamson’s behalf, also helped her to victory.
In central Louisiana, an October special election
to fill a vacant Supreme Court seat was surprisingly costly and nasty. Judge Marcus Clark
defeated Jimmy Faircloth, a former aide to Gov.
Bobby Jindal, despite campaign charges that
Clark had once been suspended as a judge for
failing to issue timely rulings. The candidates
raised a total of $1.3 million.
All told, an estimated $4,667,473 was spent on
TV ads in 2009. Of that, $3,385,916 was spent by
candidates, $975,849 by party organizations, and
$305,708 by special-interest groups. Judge Panella
was the top TV spender, with an estimated
$1,853,695. As exorbitant as his spending turned
out to be, it was nearly matched by the combined
advertising of Orie Melvin ($516,758) and the
Pennsylvania Republican Party ($975,849).
The Money Explosion

Chapter 1 Notes
1.	

These numbers are slightly higher than those
reported in the New Politics of Judicial Elections
2000. Campaign fundraising data from the National
Institute on Money in State Politics are subject to
minor fluctuations over time, as a result of late
candidate filings and amendments to earlier finance
records.

2.	 Unless otherwise specified, fundraising data include
money raised by candidates for future election cycles.
The 2007–08 total includes $1.8 million raised by
candidates for competitive and retention elections
scheduled after 2008. Candidates on the ballot in
2007–08 raised $43.8 million, including money raised
before the actual year of their election.
3.	 Reporting techniques have been progressively refined
and improved since the National Institute on Money
in State Politics began gathering information on state
court races. While some details are not available for
the early 1990s elections, such as details about some
contributors, the NIMSP data for the 1990s court
elections are the best and most complete in existence.
4.	 Totals include previously unreported TV ad data from
odd-year elections during the decade, as compiled
by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG for the National
Center for State Courts and the Justice at Stake
Campaign. The odd-year numbers augment data
previously collected for even-year elections by the
Brennan Center for Justice. For a fuller explanation of
TNS/CMAG methodology, see Chapter 2.
5.	

Campaign fundraising data come from National
Institute on Money in State Politics. Television data
for independent election ads are compiled by CMAG
for the Brennan Center for Justice.

6.	 J. Christopher Heagarty, “The Changing Face of
Judicial Elections,” North Carolina State Bar Journal
19, 20 (Winter 2002).
7.	 Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., Brief of Amici
Curiae, The Conference of Chief Justices, in Support
of Neither Party 4 (U.S. No. 08-22), available at
http://brennan.3cdn.net/d6274e472669a87b58_dqm6ii1z9.pdf.
8.	 Justice at Stake Campaign, “2001 National Bipartisan
Survey of Almost 2,500 State Judges” available
at http://www.justiceatstake.org/media/cms/
JASJudgesSurveyResults_EA8838C0504A5.pdf.
9.	 Adam Liptak. “Tilting the Scales?: The Ohio
Experience; Campaign Cash Mirrors a High Court’s
Ruling” The New York Times, Oct. 1, 2006, available
at www.nytimes.com.
10.	 Wallace B. Jefferson, “Why not elect judges on
merit, not whim?” The Dallas Morning News, March
12, 2009, available at http://www.dallasnews.com/
sharedcontent/dws/dn/opinion/viewpoints/stories/
DN-jefferson_13edi.State.Edition1.2212195.html.
11.	 Caperton v. Massey, 129 S. Ct. 2252 (2009). Ruling
available at http://www.supremecourt.gov/
opinions/08pdf/08-22.pdf.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

12.	 Robert Lenzner and Matthew Miller, “Buying
Justice,” Forbes.com, July 21, 2003, available at http://
www.forbes.com/forbes/2003/0721/064_print.html.
13.	 According to the American Judicature Society,
nine states are classified as having partisan elections for state Supreme Court seats: Alabama,
Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Ohio, New Mexico,
Pennsylvania, Texas and West Virginia. Thirteen
states are labeled as nonpartisan: Arkansas,
Georgia, Idaho, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi,
Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota,
Oregon, Washington and Wisconsin. Four of the
above states—Illinois, Montana, New Mexico and
Pennsylvania—have hybrid systems in which Supreme
Court judges must face at least one partisan or
nonpartisan election, but otherwise may face retention elections once on the court. A full summary is
available at the American Judicature Society “Judicial
Selection in the States” web site, http://www.judicialselection.us/judicial_selection_materials/index.cfm.
14.	 Two states, Arkansas and North Carolina, had
partisan elections for appellate judges in 2000, but
switched to nonpartisan elections in 2002. While they
are counted as nonpartisan states, money contributed
in the 2000 elections was apportioned to the partisan
category.
15.	 All Alabama data are from National Institute on
Money in State Politics, www.followthemoney.org.
16.	 A detailed chart of the Illinois Campaign for Political
reform is available in The New Politics of Judicial
Elections 2004, available at http://www.justiceatstake.
org/media/cms/NewPoliticsReport2004_83BBFBD7
C43A3.pdf.
17.	 These numbers refer only to candidates on a ballot
in 2007 or 2008, and do not include money raised by
candidates for future elections.
18.	 All TV data in this section are from TNS Media
Intelligence/CMAG, as provided to the Brennan
Center for Justice and the National Center for State
Courts. For a fuller explanation of TNS/CMAG
methodology, see Chapter 2.
19.	 Michigan Campaign Finance Network, “2008
Citizen’s Guide to Michigan Campaign Finance,”
Tables 15 and 16, http://www.mcfn.org/pdfs/reports/
MCFNCitGuide08.pdf.
20.	 Adam Lynch, “Court Showdown: Chamber v.
Plaintiffs,” Jackson Free Press, Oct. 29, 2008, http://
www.jacksonfreepress.com/index.php/site/comments/
court_showdown_chamber_v_plaintiffs_102908/. For
original campaign filing, see http://www.sos.state.
ms.us/PDF-Out/000000059296.pdf, Page 15.
21.	 “Donations Become Issue in Pennsylvania Supreme
Court Race,” Associated Press, Oct. 26, 2009, http://
www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2009/10/donations_become_issue_in_penn.html.
22.	 For more information on TNS Media Intelligence/
CMAG’s methodology, see Chapter 2.

23

Chapter 2

Court TV:
The Rise of Costly Attack Ads
Introduction:
After the Flood
Fueled by the explosion of money in high court
elections, the past decade has also seen an
unprecedented surge in money spent on TV ads
in judicial races. From 2000–2009, an estimated
$93.6 million was spent on air time for high
court candidate TV ads, including an estimated
$6.6 million spent in the unusually costly oddyear elections in 2007.1
Though 2004 remains the high-water mark,
2008 showed that the flood of TV money
remains strong. At over $19 million, more money
was spent on Supreme Court TV ads in 2008
than in any year except 2004—when 34 contested races had TV ads, compared with 21 in
2008.2 More ads ran than ever before, and for the
first time nationally, special interest groups and
political parties combined to spend more on TV
ads than did the candidates on the ballot.
When odd-year elections are combined, 2007–
08 was the costliest biennium ever, at $26.6 million (see “2007: TV Spending in an Off Year,”
Page 36). During those two years, eight states set
all-time records for spending on TV ads. The
figures are further evidence of a forward march
toward more money and harsher ads.
The 2007–08 biennium illustrated the new
imperative in state Supreme Court elections.
Put simply, massive spending on television is all
but a prerequisite for gaining the bench. And to
compete, judges need tremendous financial support, either in the form of large contributions or
independent expenditures.

*

Chapter 2 notes
are on page 37.

From 2004 onward, no one could doubt how
expensive and hard-fought these judicial elec-

tion air wars would be. All that remained was
a question of degree: How far were candidates
willing to go? How negative were special interest
groups capable of being? How much would state
parties spend to throw their weight behind the
endorsements and attacks?
An analysis of the 2008 cycle answers some
of these questions—and raises new ones. The
question after 2008, given the exorbitant totals
and their confirmation of mounting trends,
is whether now the perception is inevitable, at
least in certain situations, that justice is for sale.
Likewise, the corollary question is whether,
in the face of big money expenditures by litigants and lawyers, and after the U.S. Supreme
Court’s decision in Caperton v. Massey, states
and litigants will take proactive steps to combat
that perception.
Just 22 percent of states with contested Supreme
Court elections featured television advertising in
2000, but that number jumped to 64 percent in
2002. By 2004, judicial TV ads were the unquestioned norm; 80 percent of states with contested
elections ran TV ads. And that number rose
even further, to 91 percent, in 2006. Of the 16
states with contested elections in 2007 and 2008,
TV ads appeared in 14 of them (more than 85
percent). Minnesota and Washington were the
only two states where television ads did not run
in competitive high court contests.
More advertising, of course, means spikes in
spending. For the third consecutive even-year
election cycle, each state with TV advertising
averaged over $1 million in spending on those
ads; in 2008, $1.5 million on television ads was
spent on average in 13 states, down slightly from
2006 but bracing by any estimation. And 2008

broke the record for number of ads aired on
TV—58,879 ads were recorded, over 16,000 more
than the previous record set in 2004. Among the
races that featured television ads, 2,803 spots ran
on average in each contest in 2008, compared to
1,242 in 2004.

Independent Ads Lead the
Attack
The decade also saw a surge in judicial campaign advertising by special-interest groups and
political parties, and a startling rise in negative

advertising—two trends that with the exception
of 2006 have been interwoven.
From 2000–2009, an estimated $93.6 million
was spent on air time in high court contests,
including previously unreported ads from oddyear elections in Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.
Ads by non-candidate groups played a critical
role, accounting for about $39 million, or 42 percent of the total—with special interest groups
spending $27.5 million, and party organizations
adding $11.7 million. In the two most expensive
TV cycles, 2004 and 2008, independent ads
from special interest and party organizations
accounted for almost half of all air-time costs. In

Figure 12.

Total TV Spot Count in Thousands

Number of TV Ad Airings by Year, 2000–2009 High Court Elections

60
Approximate Number of Television Ads Aired:

220,000

50

40

30
Even-Year Elections

20

10

0

Off-Year Elections

2000

2001

2002

The New
Data
provided
PoliticsbyofTNS
Judicial
Media
Elections:
Intelligence/CMAG
2000–2009	

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

25

Total Spending on High Court TV Ads, 2000–2009
$30 Million
Total Spent on TV Ads 2000–2009:

$93,665,447

$25 Million

$20 Million

$15 Million

$10 Million

2009

$4,667,473*

2008

$19,945,970

2007

$6,663,382

2006

$16,086,452

2005

$523,811

2004

$24,423,252

2003

$745,400

2002

$8,441,996

2001

$1,490,800

2000

$10,676,911

Total

$93,665,447

$5 Million

0

1999-2000

2001-2002

2003-2004

2005-2006

2007-2008

2009*

Figure 13.

• One year only; 2010 data not available. Data provided by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG
2008, they combined to account for 52.2 percent
of TV ad costs.3
Beyond the dollar totals, non-candidate groups
accounted for an out-

:
Ohio 2000 Ad
ale?
Is Justice for S

Figure 14.

26	

Source: TNS Med

ia Intelligence/CM

AG

sized share of the negative ads—frequently
becoming the attack dogs of state Supreme
Court elections.
In 2000, special interest group ads
accounted for 61.9 percent of all documented attack ads, even though they
only purchased 26.7 percent of the estimated $10.6 million in air time for judicial ads. A similar pattern prevailed in
2008. Special interest groups and state
political parties were responsible for 65
percent and 22 percent of all negative
ads, respectively. Of 20,739 ads aired
by special interest groups, 14,749 came
from pro-business or otherwise conservative groups. Mississippi, Wisconsin,
and Alabama offered prime examples
of interest groups on the offensive in
2008.

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

High Court Election TV Spending, 2000–2009 (in order of total cost)

State

Candidate
Airings

Candidate
Cost

Group
Airings

Group
Cost

Party
Airings

Party
Cost

Total
Airings

Total
Cost

Ohio

32,195

$12,742,243

14,807

$7,847,403

2,342

$775,200

49,344

$21,364,846

Alabama

40,167

$13,068,197

6,100

$2,588,132

139

$34,448

46,406

$15,690,777

Michigan

8,756

$5,258,283

3,545

$3,248,059

4,884

$2,476,608

17,185

$10,982,950

Pennsylvania 15,821

$7,674,018

1,286

$947,411

4,277

$1,925,680

21,384

$10,547,109

Wisconsin

9,611

$2,484,547

15,219

$4,848,367

$0

$0

24,830

$7,332,914

Illinois

2,252

$1,275,692

1,731

$1,624,553

4,990

$4,240,885

8,973

$7,141,130

West
Virginia

5,356

$1,222,513

5,740

$2,181,468

0

$0

11,096

$3,403,981

Georgia

883

$1,065,619

1,073

$1,321,494

897

$741,459

2,853

$3,128,572

Nevada

5,807

$2,854,746

50

$39,929

0

$0

5,857

$2,894,675

Texas

1,320

$1,014,297

$0

$0

2,896

$1,519,241

4,216

$2,533,538

Mississippi

3,612

$1,165,212

3,996

$1,247,703

0

$0

7,608

$2,412,915

North
Carolina

4,077

$1,291,450

327

$272,715

0

$0

4,404

$1,564,165

Louisiana

2,168

$944,611

507

$306,120

0

$0

2,675

$1,250,731

Washington

273

$66,127

1,118

$1,092,304

0

$0

1,391

$1,158,431

Kentucky

2,895

$1,007,886

0

$0

0

$0

2,895

$1,007,886

Oregon

1,176

$576,304

0

$0

0

$0

1,176

$576,304

New Mexico 326

$383,023

0

$0

0

$0

326

$383,023

Arkansas

326

$161,540

0

$0

0

$0

326

$161,540

Montana

548

$60,801

0

$0

0

$0

548

$60,801

Idaho

479

$42,447

133

$26,712

0

$0

612

$69,159

All States

138,048

$54,359,556

55,632

$27,592,370

20,425

$11,713,521

214,105

$93,665,447

Figure 15.

Data provided by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

“I never felt so much like a hooker down by the
bus station. . . as I did in a judicial race. Everyone
interested in contributing has very specific interests.
They mean to be buying a vote.”
—Paul Pfeifer, Ohio Supreme Court justice,
NewofYork
Times
interview
The2006
New Politics
Judicial
Elections:
2000–2009	

27

Top 12 TV Ad Spenders, 2000–2009 High Court Elections
Group

Est. Ad Costs

Comments

U.S. Chamber/Ohio affiliates

$4,258,822

Includes ads by Chamber, Citizens for a Strong Ohio,
Partnership for Ohio’s Future

Michigan Chamber

$2,875,965

State affiliate of U.S. Chamber

Illinois Democratic Party

$2,519,473

Funding From plaintiffs’ lawyers

Wisconsin Manufacturers &
Commerce

$2,012,748

Affiliate of U.S. Chamber, National Association of Manufacturers

Michigan Democratic Party

$1,863,189

Heavy support from plaintiffs’ lawyers, unions

Center for Individual Freedom

$1,824,140

Big tobacco ties, other funding unknown

Illinois Republican Party

$1,816,705

U.S. Chamber funded 2004 ad blitz

Greater Wisconsin Committee

$1,736,535

Organized labor, state Democratic ties

Pennsylvania Republican Party*

$1,559,280

Funding from conservative groups

Citizens for an Independent Court

$1,543,478

Lawyers, unions in 2000/02 Ohio elections

Safety and Prosperity Coalition

$1,321,494

Funding from American Justice Partnership (formed by National
Association of Manufacturers)

American Taxpayers Alliance

$1,293,080

Received significant U.S. Chamber funding

Figure 16.

Data provided
by TNS Media
Intelligence/CMAG.

Occasionally, negative ads have backfired. In
2000, a Chamber-sponsored attack ad against
Ohio Justice Alice Resnick depicted a “Blind
Justice” statue peeking under her blindfold as
cash was placed on the scales. Backlash from
offended Ohio voters helped return Resnick to
office.
But more often, negative ads helped defeat court
candidates—some, but not all, of whom had
little public profile and could easily be defined
by nasty and often misleading 30-second spots.
For example, in 2000, a Michigan Republican
Party ad accused three Democratic candidates
of freeing killers and rapists, “again and again.”
In 2004, a $3 million independent campaign
painted West Virginia Justice Warren McGraw
as “radical” and “dangerous,” also accusing him
of freeing child molesters. In 2008, a Michigan
Democratic Party portrayed Michigan Chief
Justice Cliff Taylor as sleeping on the bench.
Each of the targeted candidates was defeated.

28	

Party Ads Crucial in ’08
Nationwide, a significant percentage of attacks
came from the state political parties themselves.
Seven of the 14 states where TV ads aired in
2007 and 2008 Supreme Court contests involved
partisan elections.4 State political parties aired
ads in only two of those states, Texas and
Michigan, but those ads constituted about 11
percent of all TV spots nationwide. In Texas and
Michigan, these attacks included ad hominem
assaults and charges of guilt by association, with
images, for example, linking Chief Justice Cliff
Taylor to the unpopular President Bush. Ads
sponsored by the various state Democratic parties outnumbered those of Republicans nearly 4
to 1, reflecting the Democrats’ 2.5 to 1 spending
advantage on TV ads.
The top five spenders on TV ads in 2008
included, unsurprisingly, three special interest
groups: Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce5
(spending just shy of $1.3 million), the Greater
Wisconsin Committee6 (at a little over $1.1 mil-

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

lion), and the Center for Individual Freedom7
(over $965,000 in Alabama). In two of these
cases, the candidate sponsored by the group was
the better-funded candidate—in terms of spending on TV ads—and went on to win the election. The Michigan Democratic State Central
Committee was the fourth biggest spender on
TV ads during 2007–08, putting $1,164,132
toward Diane Hathaway’s November victory.
The outlier, and the single greatest spender
on TV ads in 2008, was Alabama Democrat
Deborah Bell Paseur, whose narrow loss to
Republican Greg Shaw speaks volumes about
where state Supreme Court elections stand after
2008. The only one among the top five spending
leaders to have put her money toward a losing
cause, Paseur spent $1,741,179 on television ads,
but she was still outspent by the combination of
her opponent’s campaign and the conservative
interest group that supported him. Shaw spent

e,
nsin Commit te
Greater Wisco
08
T V Ad from 20

$884,828
on
TV ads, and
benefited from
the
$965,529
in outside support
from
the
Virginiabased
Center
for Individual
Freedom.

ce/CM AG
Paseur’s loss was,
S Media Intelligen
e 17. Source: TN
ur
Fig
in the end, an
example of the fact
that, absent public
financing, massive fundraising from lawyers,
parties, and interest groups with causes before
the courts is increasingly necessary, but not sufficient to win election to state high courts.
Figure 18.

Data provided
by TNS Media
Intelligence/CMAG.

TV Spending, 2008 High Court Elections (in order of total cost)
State

Candidate

Group

Party

Total

Airings

Cost

Airings

Cost

Airings

Cost

Airings

Cost

Wisconsin

1,904

$411,517

10,056

$3,377,640

0

$0

11,960

$3,789,157

Michigan

3,704

$1,268,391

1,208

$804,869

3,471

$1,565,391

8,383

$3,638,651

Alabama

8,505

$2,626,007

2,444

$965,529

0

$0

10,949

$3,591,536

Texas

937

$728,321

0

$0

2,813

$1,377,003

3,750

$2,105,324

Nevada

3,906

$1,450,506

0

$0

0

$0

3,906

$1,450,506

Mississippi 1,798

$434,537

2,765

$860,532

0

$0

4,563

$1,295,069

West
Virginia

4,119

$788,995

1,932

$479,225

$0

6,051

$1,268,220

Ohio

2,670

$574,208

1,760

$684,623

0

$0

4,430

$1,258,831

Louisiana

1,880

$791,399

574

$306,120

0

$0

2,454

$1,097,519

North
Carolina

1,049

$234,274

0

$0

0

$0

1,049

$234,274

Kentucky

334

$113,635

0

$0

0

$0

334

$113,635

Montana

571

$60,801

0

$0

0

$0

571

$60,801

Idaho

479

$42,447

0

$0

0

$0

479

$42,447

Total

31,856

$9,525,038

20,739

$7,478,538

6,284

$2,942,394

58,879

$19,945,970

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

29

State in Focus: Michigan
Party Ads Bathe Both Candidates in Mud
In 2008, spending on television ads in Michigan
was 4.5 times higher than just two years earlier,
placing the state third nationally in total ad
spending for the 2007–08 biennium, behind
only Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.8 More striking still was the victory of Diane Hathaway, a
Democratic challenger, who unseated the state’s
sitting Supreme Court Chief Justice, Republican
Cliff Taylor. Taylor’s loss marked the first time in
Michigan state history that an incumbent chief
justice lost a bid for re-election.
A confluence of factors may partly explain the
circumstances of Hathaway’s commanding
victory. A Democrat, she ran with significant
party support in a state from which the national
Republicans effectively withdrew in the midst of
the presidential race. In a race where more than
40 percent of all television spending (in excess
of $1.5 million) came from the state political
parties, and in which one of those parties, while
still spending on the court race, significantly
cut back on its in-state “ground-game,” party
presence may have been a key to Hathaway’s
campaign success.
Justice Taylor had more overall air-time support than Judge Hathaway, with ads sponsored
by the Michigan Chamber of Commerce,
the Michigan Republican Party, and his own
campaign. Hathaway’s air-time support drew
from her own campaign as well as the state
Democratic Party. The Michigan Democratic
State Central Committee outspent its

Judge”:
e
The “Sleeping
an Chief Justic
ig
h
ic
M
s
m
la
S
Democratic Ad

Figure 19.

30	

ia Intelligence/C
Source: TNS Med

Republican counterpart nearly 3 to 1, putting
up over $1 million (almost a third of the money
spent on TV advertising in the state) to attack
Taylor. In all, combined television spending—
including TV ads by the Michigan Chamber, state
political parties, and candidates themselves—
amounted to $2,075,423 in TV costs for Taylor
and $1,563,228 for Hathaway.
The Democratic Party’s attacks on Taylor were
significant and perhaps decisive. Whether they
were accurate portrayals of the facts remains a
matter of in-state debate. The state Democratic
Party ran over 2,800 television ads, 34 percent
of all spots run in the state and more than
any other single group. Every Democratic ad
attacked Taylor.
One ad, in particular, was thought to have
been crucial. It begins with talk of a nightmare:
a dramatized image purporting to show Cliff
Taylor asleep on the bench in the middle of a
trial involving the death of six children in a fire
at a public housing unit. Testimonials (from
the actual people involved in the trial) follow.
The mothers of the children say that Taylor fell
asleep “several times in the middle of our arguments.” A recurrent image shown throughout the
ad—the one that opens and concludes it—is
apparently of Taylor sleeping, though on the bottom of each frame is the word “Dramatization.”
Accounts of Taylor sleeping on the bench seem
dubious. The two mothers of the children were
the only people who claimed that he had
fallen asleep. Their own lawyer seemed
to evade the question when asked (even
though he was outspoken in his criticism
of Taylor), and Michigan Government
Television broadcasts of the trial do
not show any images of Taylor asleep
on the bench. Moreover, according
to Fact Check.org of the Annenberg
Public Policy Center at the University
of Pennsylvania, the allegation itself
had not surfaced publicly until a month
before the election, even though the
trial in question had taken place over a
year earlier.9

M AG

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

Sponsors and Tone, 2008 High Court Election Ads

Attack Ads

Contrast Ads

Promote Ads

Special Interest

Special Interest

Special Interest

Political Party

Political Party

Political Party

Candidate

Candidate

Candidate

Figure 20.

Data provided by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

TV: Focus on 2008
2008 Television Advertising
Snapshots

In 2008, independent special interest groups
played an unprecedented role, spending a combined $7,478,538 on TV ads and topping the
record set by such groups in 2004. Combined
with the $2.9 million spent by state party organizations, it was the first time that groups not
affiliated with the official campaigns spent more
on television than the candidates themselves.
Groups and parties outspent the candidates in
four states: Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio and
Wisconsin.
Of the 21 contested races in which campaign ads
were aired, candidates who benefited from more
television advertising—including amounts spent
by special interest groups and political parties on
their behalf or against their opponents—won 70
percent of the time in 2008. That figure was up
from 67 percent in 2006, though still shy of the
85 percent success rate in 2004. In the six races
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

where the candidate with less money spent on
airtime went on to win, three of the winning
candidates were incumbents who clearly benefited from name-recognition and an established
reputation.10
2008 also saw less electoral success for candidates supported by pro-business and conservative
groups than in 2006. In 2006 candidates supported by pro-business and conservative groups
won 71 percent of the time, whereas in 2008,
candidates backed by such groups won only half
their races. Candidates supported by progressive
groups received less financial support and did
not fare as well. Many candidates received no
outside support from groups on either side.
Seven states set TV spending records in 2008:
Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana,
Nevada, Texas and Wisconsin (an eighth state,
Pennsylvania, set a new mark in 2007).11 For
a comprehensive summary of ad airings and
spending in all states in 2008, see chart on page
29.

More information
@justiceatstake.org

31

State in Focus: Wisconsin
Election Victory at What Price to the Courts?
The April 2008 Supreme Court contest between
incumbent Louis Butler and lower court judge
Mike Gableman was the most expensive and
hardest fought race of the season. While special
interest groups were responsible for nearly 90
percent of all money spent on television ads in
the state (over $3 million), the most controversial ad came from Judge Gableman himself.
In a spot that first aired March 14, a female
voice, speaking over sinister background
music, declared that Louis Butler worked to
“put criminals on the street.” A recent image
of Butler flashed across the screen—but the
ad’s narrator named Reuben Lee Mitchell, the
convicted rapist of an “11 year old girl with
learning disabilities.” Quickly citing a later crime
committed by Mitchell, the ad insinuated that
Butler was responsible for letting Mitchell go
free and molest another child. The final image
on the screen shows Butler as a judge—visually
reinforcing the impression that he freed Mitchell
while on the bench.
The claim was misleading. During his career
as a judge, Louis Butler never even heard a
case involving Reuben Lee Mitchell. Instead,
in 1987, as a court-appointed public defender,
he represented Mitchell, asking for a new trial
of a rape conviction because of a violation of
criminal procedure in the original proceeding.
The court of appeals agreed, but the Wisconsin
Supreme Court did not, and the conviction
stood.12 Mitchell served his prison sentence until
1992, when he was paroled. Three years after
his release, Mitchell molested another girl. But
Butler had nothing to do with Mitchell’s parole,
either as an attorney or as a judge.
The ad also engaged in racial provocation.
It showed Butler, Wisconsin’s only African
American Supreme Court justice, alongside a
photo of Mitchell, who is also black. The visual
side-by-side dissolve and pairing—which caused
a widespread outcry for its racial undertones—
was capped by a suggestive closing message:
“Can Wisconsin families feel safe with Louis
Butler on the Supreme Court?” National organizations including Factcheck.org compared
the ads to the infamous Willie Horton ads—the

32	

controversial, racially divisive ads run by a PAC
supporting George H.W. Bush’s presidential campaign. In 1988, the Bush campaign took pains to
distance itself from the Willie Horton ads. Two
decades later, it was a judicial candidate’s own
campaign that paid for, produced and aired the
campaign’s most divisive ad.
Judge Gableman won by two percentage points
and became the first challenger to beat a sitting Wisconsin justice in over 40 years. But
the controversy did not end on Election Day.
The Wisconsin Judicial Commission alleged
that Gableman had violated the code of judicial
conduct by running a false television ad against
Butler, “made knowingly with reckless disregard
for truth”—triggering a protracted inquiry that
ended only when the Wisconsin Supreme Court
deadlocked 3-3 on the charges.
Special interest groups also played a
critical role in Butler’s defeat. Two groups, the
Coalition for America’s Families and Wisconsin
Manufacturers & Commerce, spent more than
$1.6 million on TV ads. All of the Coalition for
America’s Families ads included direct assaults
on Butler. Eighty percent of the WMC ads were
attacks, focusing almost exclusively on one
of Butler’s past decisions as a judge involving
criminal justice.
Justice Butler estimates that the total amount of
money spent on the contest was closer to $10
million. “We know that [the reported] number
[is] grossly underrepresented because none of
it tracks the cable money. Unless you have the
resources and unless you’re willing to go to out
to the municipalities to track the cable spending
one by one, you can’t get at those figures.”13
At a 2008 program in Washington, D.C., sponsored by former Justice Sandra Day O’Connor
to discuss the state of the judiciary, Butler used
John Grisham’s writing to convey his plight.
Holding up The Appeal, Grisham’s best-selling
tale of a chemical company that spends heavily
to tilt the Mississippi Supreme Court, Butler
told the audience: “Welcome to my world.”14

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

2008 Anti-Butler Ad Triggered Questions on Truth, Race

[Announcer]: Unbelievable. Shadowy special interests supporting Louis Butler are
attacking Judge Michael

Gableman. It’s not true. Judge, District
Attorney Michael Gableman

has committed his life to locking up criminals to keep families safe, putting

child molesters behind bars for over 100
years. Louis Butler worked to put

criminals on the street, like Reuben Lee
Mitchell who raped an 11-year-old girl

with learning disabilities. Butler found a
loophole, Mitchell went on to molest

another child. Can Wisconsin families feel
safe with Louis Butler on the Supreme
Court?

[PFB]: GABLEMAN FOR SUPREME COURT

Figure 21.

Copyright 2008 TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

“Welcome to my world.”
—Louis Butler, holding up John Grisham’s
novel The Appeal, after reality followed
art and a high-cost campaign helped push
Butler off the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

33

Alabama 2008:
Ad Ties Candidate to Special Interests

[Announcer]: The Sunday newspaper just
reported

campaign with hundreds of thousands of
dollars. Then there’s a million dollars

that insurance companies and bankers
have bankrolled Greg Shaw’s

tied to gas and oil lobbyists from this
building

➜➜ In Michigan and Nevada, spending on television ads in 2008 dwarfed
totals from the previous election cycle.
Spending in Nevada was three times
what it was in 2006, and eclipsed
spending in the 2004 and 2006 election
cycles combined. Increased spending on
television ads was similarly dramatic in
Michigan. The $3,638,651 spent there in
2008 represented a 450 percent increase
in spending compared to 2006.
➜➜ Louisiana and Mississippi also saw significant swells in spending on TV ads.
In 2004, $153,212 was spent on television
advertisements in Louisiana.15 In 2008,
spending exceeded $1 million. Totals in
Mississippi doubled between the 2004
and 2008 election cycles, shooting from
just over $600,000 in 2004 to nearly $1.3
million in 2008.
➜➜ Texas witnessed spending spikes in 2008
that made figures from previous election
cycles in the state look minuscule. The
more than $2 million spent on TV ads
in the state in 2008 was five times what
it was in 2002, the last year prior to
2008 in which the state saw TV ads in
their Supreme Court contests.16
The majority of the most controversial and
costly ad campaigns were sponsored by special
interest groups and state party organizations.

near Washington, DC. So the choice is
clear. Deborah Bell Paseur

is the only judge who sentenced criminals
to jail. And Deborah can’t be bought.

[Deborah Bell Paseur]: “You honor me with
your vote, I’ll serve you with honor.”

[PFB]: JUDGEDEBORAHBELL.COM

34	
Figure 22.

Copyright 2008 TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

➜➜ In Mississippi, a Virginia-based group,
the Law Enforcement Alliance of
America, accused incumbent Oliver
Diaz, Jr. of “voting for” convicted killers and rapists in three separate cases.
Each accusation proved overwrought
if not misleading. The state’s Special
Committee on Judicial Election
Campaign Intervention roundly
denounced the ad, issuing a public statement on October 29. Some—though
not all—television stations stopped
running the ad. But the ad had aired for
over a week before the Committee intervened. Diaz lost the election to lowercourt judge Randy “Bubba” Pierce, who
said he had nothing to do with the ads.

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

➜➜ In Michigan, the Democratic State
Central Committee, capitalizing on
President Bush’s dwindling popularity,
ran ads linking Republican incumbent
Cliff Taylor to the former President.
One ad intoned: “George W. Bush and
Clifford Taylor, political soldiers for the
rich.” It went on to show clips of Bush
endorsing Taylor. In another ad, the
veracity of which has been widely questioned, Democrats depicted Taylor as
sleeping on the job (see “State in Focus:
Michigan,” Page 30). Ads by the state
Republican Party and state Chamber
of Commerce branded Judge Diane
Hathaway as a terrorist sympathizer,
weak on crime and lazy.
➜➜ In Alabama, the Virginia-based Center
for Individual Freedom purchased more
air time, an estimated $965,529 worth,
than did the candidate it was supporting, Republican Greg Shaw, who
spent an estimated $884,828. Together,
the two narrowly outspent Democrat
Deborah Bell Paseur, who lost by a close
margin. While many CFIF ads were
positive, Paseur lashed out at the group,
claiming it was working as a front for
the oil and gas industry.
➜➜ In Wisconsin, the nation’s ugliest and
most controversial ad of 2008 came
from a judge. Mike Gableman’s racially
tinged ads against sitting Justice Louis
Butler triggered an ethics complaint
against Gableman after he defeated
Butler. (“See State in Focus: Wisconsin,”
Page 32). But independent special interest groups accounted for 56 percent of
all attack ads. One ad, run by the conservative group Coalition for America’s
Families, featured a dramatization of
a “raped, beaten, and strangled co-ed,”
adding that Justice Butler sought to let
the attacker go free. The ad claimed
that Butler sided with criminals “nearly
60 percent of the time.” Gableman’s
integrity was attacked in ads aired by
the Greater Wisconsin Committee,
which suggested he was appointed to
a judgeship as a payoff for a political
contribution.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Michigan 2008:
Challenger Assailed as Soft on Terrorism

[Announcer]: Newspapers call Diane
Hathaway, “[un]qualified,” for the Supreme
Court.

Remember the low sentence Hathaway
gave a sex predator

that targeted a minor? There’s more.

Hathaway granted probation to a man who
was arrested in camouflage paint

while carrying a loaded AK-47.

His web page praised terrorists and
declared his own personal Jihad.

Probation for a terrorist sympathizer? We’re at war with terrorists. Diane
Hathaway, out of touch.

[PFB]: MICHIGAN REPUBLICAN PARTY

Figure 23.

Copyright 2008 TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

35

2007: Supreme Court TV Spending in an Off Year
Only two states—Pennsylvania and Wisconsin—routinely hold Supreme Court elections in odd-numbered years. Spending in
these elections typically has fallen short of other election states in the past decade. But in 2007, Pennsylvania’s high court
election was more expensive than any in 2008, and spending on TV ads reflected that, at more than $4.5 million. While spending in Wisconsin’s race between Michael Gableman and Louis Butler drew headlines in 2008, the state also reached unprecedented heights for off-year elections in 2007. On TV ad airings alone, candidates and special interest groups combined to
spend more than $2.1 million. Spending in off-year elections has generally not been significant enough to justify systematic
tracking, but if 2007 is any indication for judicial elections, there may be fewer quiet years in the future.
The impact of 2007 spending is captured in one fact. While 2004 remains the single most expensive year for TV ad spending,
2007–08 set a new record as the costliest biennium. The estimated $26.6 million in ad buys in 2007–08 exceeds the $25.2
million recorded in 2003–04.

TV Spending, 2007 High Court Elections
State

Candidate

Group

Party

Total

Airings

Cost

Airings

Cost

Airings

Cost

Airings

Cost

Pennsylvania

6,386

$3,500,454

1,048

$858,611

795

$196,131

8,229

$4,555,196

Wisconsin

3,392

$943,167

3,755

$1,165,019

0

$0

7,147

$2,108,186

Total

9,778

$4,443,621

4,803

$2,023,630

795

$196,131

15,376

$6,663,382

Figure 24.

Data provided by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG.

TV Spending in Off-Year High Court Elections, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin
$5 Million
Pennsylvania

$4 Million
Wisconsin

$3 Million

$2 Million

$1 Million

$0
Figure 25.

36	

2001

2003

2005

2007

2009

Data provided by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

Court TV: The Rise of Costly Attack Ads

Chapter 2 Notes
1.	

In prior “New Politics of Judicial Election” reports,
only even-year elections were monitored for Supreme
Court TV ads. In response to the unusually costly
2007 elections in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, this
report for the first time incorporates odd-year election
data, dating back to 1999. The odd-year data have
been added to decade TV totals, leading to revisions
of earlier published estimates.

2.	 The estimated costs of airtime in this report are
drawn from television advertising data from the
nation’s 100 largest media markets. The estimates
were calculated and supplied by TNS Media
Intelligence/CMAG. The calculations do not include
either ad agency commissions or the costs of production. The costs reported here therefore understate
expenditures, and the estimates are useful principally
for purposes of comparison within each state.
3.	 While odd-year election TV spending totals are
included for the first time in this report, because of
the late arrival of some odd-year data, many specific
analyses, such as the percentage of ads accounted for
by non-candidate groups, are based only on 2008 and
other even years.
4.	 Those states are Alabama, Louisiana, Michigan,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, and West Virginia. (No
ads were run in the other two partisan states, Illinois,
where the incumbent was not challenged, or New
Mexico).
5.	

Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce is a
Wisconsin-based business issues advocacy group
that includes large and small manufacturers, service
companies, local chambers of commerce and specialized trade associations. The group was responsible for
more ad airings in the state than any other group or
candidate in 2008, running 32 percent of all ads, and
was the biggest spender on TV ads in the state. By
the campaign’s end, their disclosed spending reached
$1,296,842, making it the single biggest spender
among special interest groups across the country in
2008. WMC also spent heavily 2007, to help elect
Justice Annette Ziegler. Between the two elections,
the group spent an estimated $2,054,292.

6.	 The Greater Wisconsin Committee is a Wisconsinbased progressive political action committee that
receives significant funding from organized labor
and whose leadership has close ties to the office of
Democratic Governor Jim Doyle. Including the 2007
election, GWC spent an estimated total of $1,430,807
on TV air time in 2007–08.

7.	 The Center for Individual Freedom, a conservative
PAC based in Virginia, works primarily on legal
and legislative issues ranging from Supreme Court
nominees to energy and tax policy reform. In addition
to the 2008 Alabama race, CFIF spent an estimated
$858,611 in the 2007 Pennsylvania election. That
raised the group’s total to $1,824,140, making it the
nation’s second biggest spender on Supreme Court ads
in the 2007–08 biennium.
8.	 Michigan ranked sixth in total spending in 2006
among the ten states nationwide where there were
contested Supreme Court elections.
9.	 Viveca Novak, “The Case of the Sleeping Judge,”
Factcheck.org (Nov. 26, 2008), available at http://
www.factcheck.org/elections-2008/the_case_of_the_
sleeping_justice.html.
10.	 These candidates were Joel Horton (Idaho), Lisabeth
Hughes Abramson (Kentucky), and Phil Johnson
(Texas). The name recognition of an incumbent is, of
course, an advantage in campaigns for any office. But
it is especially important in judicial races because of
the so-called “voter roll off ” that tends to plague elections for judgeships. Voters who select presidential,
gubernatorial, congressional and even local candidates
often fail to vote for Supreme Court candidates. As
a result, candidates generally rely on television ads to
boost name recognition and visibility; having served a
previous term, with the attendant status that provides,
is thus an obvious advantage.
11.	 Wisconsin set TV ad records in both 2007 and 2008.
For more on the Wisconsin/Pennsylvania 2007 elections, see article on Page 36.
12.	 Writing for the majority, Justice Shirley Abrahamson
(now Chief Justice) granted that Butler’s argument
had legal merit but she maintained that it did not
change the basis of his conviction. “We can conclude,”
she reasoned, “that there is no reasonable possibility
that the error contributed to the conviction.”
13.	 Honorable Louis Butler, Remarks at the Sandra Day
O’Connor Conference on the State of the Judiciary,
Panel: State Judicial Races – How Can Corporations
Help Stop the Campaign Funding ‘Arms Race’?, (Oct.
2, 2008).
14.	 Id.
15.	 Prior to 2008, the last state Supreme Court elections
held in Louisiana were in 2006, when two incumbents
ran unopposed.
16.	 Though Texas held contested Supreme Court elections in 2004 and 2006, no TV ads ran there during
those years.

“The risk inherent in any non-publicly funded judicial election for this
court is that the public may inaccurately perceive a justice as beholden to
individuals or groups that contribute to his or her campaign.”
—Wisconsin’s seven Supreme Court justices, in a December 2007 letter appealing for public
financing of court elections
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

37

Chapter 3

Who Played? Who Won?

Karl Rove was among
the first to organize
serious fundraising
for judicial races.

Who has been working the hardest to change
judicial politics and place their preferred candidates on the bench? A perfect map is impossible
to draw, because inadequate disclosure laws
make it so difficult to trace money to its roots,
especially since all sides use conduit groups to
mask the real sources of donations. But two
conclusions can be drawn. First, for more than a
decade, players on the political right have raised
more money and won more court races. Second,
it has been an asymmetrical battle, with conservatives channeling money through national
and sometimes state-based groups, while the left
largely has organized at the state level, routing
its biggest money from plaintiffs’ lawyers and
unions through Democratic Party committees
and independent groups.
One thing is clear: in America’s tort wars, both
sides feel perpetually aggrieved, pointing to rulings they believe to be abusive and courts they
are convinced are biased, and vowing to outorganize and outspend the other side.

One of the first players to successfully organize
such efforts on a large scale is well-known: Karl
Rove. In the late 1980s and early ’90s, Rove
masterminded a turnaround that reversed the
makeup of the Texas Supreme Court, from a
Democratic body known for cozy relations with
the plaintiffs’ bar to an all-Republican panel that
took a hard line on injury and product liability
cases. In the early 1990s, he was hired by the
Business Council of Alabama to perform a similar feat in that state.1 Both state courts eventually
became overwhelmingly Republican, along with
Louisiana’s.
In 2000, business and conservative groups began
funding, and organizing, state Supreme Court
races from a national stage, often with an invisible hand. Over the next eight years, plaintiffs’
lawyers and unions lost control of Supreme
Courts in Illinois, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio,
Wisconsin and West Virginia.
Key players in the conservative coalitions have
included leaders from such top companies as

Washington 2006: National Groups Finance Attack Ads in State Race

[Roberts]: “He was adorable. Stevie had
just turned three years old before he was

beaten and tortured to death. The Andress
decision let my son’s killer

walk free after serving less than a third of
his murder sentence. You could have a

convicted murderer released on the
Andress decision next door

Figure 26. Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse waged a TV assault in Washington’s 2006 election, aided by funding from an arm of the
National Association for Manufacturers.

Copyright 2006 TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG

Home Depot, insurance giant AIG, Chrysler
and big tobacco, and such leading business trade
groups as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and
the National Association of Manufacturers.
Intellectual support has been provided by a number of state Federalist Society chapters. Political
players included Bob Perry, a real estate magnate who financed the Swift Boat Veterans for
Truth campaign in 2004’s presidential election,
and CRC Communications, the PR company
that spearheaded the Swift Boat campaign.
Faced with an unprecedented spigot of money
from Washington-based business and conservative groups, the lawyers and unions have funneled
money into state-level special interest groups and
political party organizations, often masking the
scale of their support (see “Focus on Alabama:
Shell Game on the Left,” Pages 46–47)—and
have gradually clawed back a little of their lost
turf. (See chart, “Top Supreme Court Spenders,
2000–09 and 2007–08,” Page 40)
In Alabama, for instance, Deborah Bell Paseur,
who narrowly lost to Republican Greg Shaw in
2008, got fully 61 percent of her money from the
state Democratic Party, while in Michigan and
Texas, state Democrats ran million-dollar TV
ad campaigns. In each case, plaintiffs’ lawyers
were believed to have played a key role in the
funding.
The success of the business groups has recently
slowed, possibly due in part to shifting public
attitudes about party identification and the business sector. In 2006, a spinoff of the National

and you wouldn’t even know it. If Justice
Alexander hadn’t voted for this decision

this wouldn’t have happened. Judge
Alexander is way out of touch with this
issue.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Association of Manufacturers failed to oust
Georgia’s chief justice, while in Alabama, Sue
Bell Cobb became chief justice, and the only
Democrat, on the state’s Supreme Court. In
2007–08, chief justices were voted out in three
states, in part because of perceived business
and special interest ties. Trial lawyer and union
money also played a key role as Democrats won
two seats in Pennsylvania’s 2007 election, the
nation’s costliest in the 2007–08 cycle. And
even in Alabama and Texas, the two states where
Rove pioneered the conservative remaking of
state Supreme Courts, the margin of defeat for
Democratic candidates was unexpectedly narrow.

*

Chapter 3 notes
are on page 54.

The closing gap makes a disturbing prognosis
clear: With each side able to draw blood, and
therefore hopeful that they can win if they just
spend enough money, the odds of continuing
super spender showdowns are greater than ever.

Nationalizing of Court
Elections
It would be inaccurate to say the 2000–2009
period saw the first special interest spending on
state Supreme Court elections. As far back as
the late 1980s, national reports using the phrase
“Justice for Sale” were run by Time magazine and
“60 Minutes,” and focused on plaintiffs’ lawyers
in Texas.2 In 2000, national and business media
were reporting on how the business sector was
fighting to shift the balance on state courts back
from what many considered a pro-plaintiff bias.

I’m here supporting John Groen because
John Groen is for victims and their
families.”

[PFB]: Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse

39

Top Supreme Court Spenders, 2000–09 and 2007–08
$40 Million

$35 Million

$30 Million

$25 Million

$11,912,300

Figure 27. In part reflecting their different strategies,
business groups organized national campaigns and
dominated the top 10 spender groups for the decade.
But plaintiffs’ lawyers, unions and liberals, who organized and raised funds at the state level, held their
own among the nation’s highest-spending interest
groups in 2007-08.

$26,262,977
Plaintiffs' Lawyers/Unions/Liberals

$20 Million

Business/Conservative

$15 Million

$10 Million

$6,175,226

$5 Million

$6,173,574
$0

2000–2009

These groups took spending to unprecedented
heights and for the first time nationalized state
Supreme Court elections.

Home Depot
co-founder
Bernard Marcus

40	

In a 2002 speech to the Illinois Chamber
of Commerce, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
President Thomas Donohue suggested a precipitating event in explaining the Chamber’s
state Supreme Court strategy.
“Flush with billions of dollars in fees from
tobacco and asbestos litigation, a small group of
class-action trial lawyers is hellbent on destroy-

2007–2008

ing other industries, and nobody is immune,”
Donohue told the Illinois Chamber. “Our
approach is simple—implement a multi-front
strategy of challenging these unscrupulous trial
lawyers every time they poke their head out
of the ground. … On the political front, we’re
going to get involved in key state Supreme Court
and attorney general races as part of our effort
to elect pro-legal reform judicial candidates. . . .
We’re clearly engaged in hand-to-hand combat,
and we’ve got to step it up if we’re going to
survive.”3
Who Played? Who Won?

“We’re going to get involved in key state
supreme court and attorney general races
as part of our effort to elect pro-legal reform
judicial candidates. . . . We’re clearly engaged
in hand-to-hand combat, and we’ve got to
step it up if we’re going to survive.”
—Thomas Donohue, president of U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, 2002 speech

From the start, the Chamber campaign drew on
some of America’s deepest pockets. According
to a landmark 2003 Forbes article, Home Depot
co-founder Bernard Marcus and Maurice
“Hank” Greenberg, chairman of the insurance
giant AIG, contributed millions of dollars to the
cause, and they remain vocal leaders in the antitort movement. Other early $1 million contributors included Wal-Mart, DaimlerChrysler, and
the American Council of Life Insurers.4
The spending in 2000 has never been fully
accounted for because the Chamber spent much
of its money through conduit groups. In 2005,
successful disclosure litigation revealed that
one Chamber-funded group, Citizens for a
Strong Ohio, spent an estimated $4.4 million
in ads. The Chamber’s Alabama affiliate, the
Business Council of Alabama, poured $1.6
million into a then-record $13.1 million election. Mississippi’s attorney general said the
Chamber spent $400,000 in ads there, while
other estimates accounting for the full reach
of the campaign ranged as high as $1 million.
While the Chamber lost widely publicized races
in Ohio and Mississippi, it swept all five seats in
Alabama, and all but ran the table in 2002 and
2004 state Supreme Court elections.5

tobacco, while the Law Enforcement Alliance
of America has received funding from the
National Rifle Association—although the funding of that group’s state court campaigns remains
unclear.
Many of the groups have worked to conceal
the original sources of their money, sometimes
in protracted litigation, and documentation of
financial backers is partial at best.

Former AIG CEO
Maurice Greenberg

The Left: Organizing at
the State Level
At the national level, competing groups such as
plaintiffs’ lawyers, unions and the Democratic
Party have failed to match their conservative and
business-group opponents.
In 2007, a new national PAC, the Democratic
Judicial Campaign Committee, was founded,
but in its first two years, it failed to identify a
national funding stream that would enable it to
fight back against national groups on the right.
The American Association of Justice, formerly
the American Trial Lawyers Association, has
primarily focused on federal elections.

Former Georgia
governor Roy Barnes
was on the board
of the Democratic
Judicial Campaign
Committee.

In 2005, the National Association of
Manufacturers (NAM) took this sort of coordination a step further. NAM leader John
Engler, previously the governor of Michigan,
launched the American Justice Partnership.
Other national players also began financing
state Supreme Court races. The American
Tort Reform Association and the Center for
Individual Freedom have historic links to big
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

41

Nonetheless, in 2007–08, the state-based groups
were much more successful in holding their own
financially, even when they ultimately lost elections. In Michigan, the state Democrats spent
an estimated $1.16 million on a series of TV ads
lambasting then-Chief Justice Cliff Taylor, who
was ousted by Democrat Diane Hathaway. In
Wisconsin, the Greater Wisconsin Committee,
a PAC whose leadership includes Kirk Brown, a
former aide to Democratic Governor Jim Doyle,
spent just under $1.2 million on TV air time.
The committee nearly matched the TV spending
of Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce,
although the Democratic incumbent, Louis
Butler, eventually lost.
In Mississippi, where the conviction of classaction lawyer Richard Scruggs plunged the
plaintiffs’ bar into scandal, trial lawyers took a
novel approach in 2008 to keep a low profile.
The state trial lawyers group, the Mississippi
Association for Justice, passed the hat after
the election.6 Thus, newly elected Justice Jim
Kitchens was able to retire $300,000 in debt he
had incurred during his underdog campaign
against incumbent Jim Smith—with help from
the very lawyers and other interests who would
appear before him in court.
And Alabama and Texas provided vivid examples
of how plaintiffs’ lawyers can spend millions on
preferred candidates without identifying themselves, by the simple expedient of using political
action committees to route money to state party
organizations. (See “Focus on Alabama: Shell
Game on the Left,” Pages 46–47.)

“With businesses and interest groups
pouring more and more money into state
judicial elections. . . the public can’t
be faulted for concluding that donors
are getting what they pay for, namely
favorable treatment from judges who are
supposed to be impartial.”

The National
Networks
American Justice
Partnership
The national network on the right that has
emerged around tort issues can be glimpsed
in a group formed in 2005 by the National
Association of Manufacturers: the American
Justice Partnership. AJP was founded shortly
after former Michigan Gov. John Engler took
the helm at NAM, and its membership list contains many of the biggest state-level and national
funders in judicial politics today.
Although AJP generally has worked through
conduits, in 2006 it gave $300,000 to Oregon
Supreme Court candidate Jack Roberts. It was
also the primary financial backer of an interestgroup campaign to unseat Georgia Supreme
Court Chief Justice Carol Hunstein, writing $1.3
million in checks to the Safety and Prosperity
Coalition. AJP also contributed $345,000 to
Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse, at a time
when that group was running a 2006 independent campaign backing John Groen and Stephen
Johnson for Washington state Supreme Court.
And in 2008 it donated $125,000 to the Business
& Industry Political Action Committee’s campaign arm, for ads supporting then-Mississippi
Chief Justice Jim Smith.7
AJP President Dan Pero has declared that AJP
“receives no funds from NAM.” But there is little doubt whose efforts it seeks to support. Every
documented check from the American Justice
Partnership to candidates and independent campaigns lists its address as 1331 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, in Washington, D.C.—the same
address as the national headquarters of the
National Association of Manufacturers.8

—Tony Mauro, USA Today opinion column

42	

Who Played? Who Won?

The Long Reach of the
American Justice Partnership

U.S. Chamber of
Commerce Network

Founded by the National Association of
Manufacturers in 2005, the American
Justice Partnership lists 20 national partners and 42 state-level partners based in
21 states. It is formally partnered with at
least 12 groups that have spent money
on state Supreme Court elections, and
financially supported campaign efforts by
three other groups. In addition to being
one of the nation’s top super spenders
for 2000–09 state Supreme Court elections, the AJP is formally allied with two
members of the top 10 spenders for the
2000–09 decade. Two other partners,
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce and
the Center for Individual Freedom, were
top 10 spenders nationally in 2007–08
elections.

While the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has
never issued a detailed listing of which races it
played a financial role in, its involvement has
been documented in campaigns in Alabama,
Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Mississippi and West
Virginia. A 2003 Forbes article credited the
Chamber with backing the winning candidate
in 21 of 24 contested races in 2000 and 2002.

State Partners
Business Council of Alabama
Illinois Chamber of Commerce
Illinois Civil Justice League
Michigan Chamber of Commerce
Mississippians for Economic Progress
Ohio Chamber of Commerce
Stop Lawsuit Abuse of Alabama
Texas Civil Justice League
West Virginia Chamber of Commerce
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce
National Partners
American Tort Reform Association
Center for Individual Freedom
Campaigns Subsidized by AJP
Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse,
Washington 2006
Safety and Prosperity Coalition,
Georgia 2006

In 2008, the U.S. and Ohio Chambers accounted for $624,260 of the $943,000 raised by
the Partnership for Ohio’s Future,9 while
state chambers spent heavily in Michigan and
West Virginia. Mississippians for Economic
Progress, a group that the Chamber has routed
money through in the past, operated an independent campaign that spent an estimated $67,797
in TV ads in 2008, favoring then-Chief Justice
Jim Smith. The American Taxpayers Alliance,
which has financed independent campaigns in
Alabama and Illinois, reported receiving $2.6
million in 2002 from the U.S. Chamber,10 making the Chamber its biggest financial contributor that year. ATA spent heavily on ads backing
now-Justice Rita Garman.

John Engler, president of the National
Association of
Manufacturers

The Chamber lists Wisconsin Manufacturers
& Commerce and the Business Council of
Alabama as its official state allies. WMC was
the nation’s top super spender group in 2007–08
state Supreme Court races, while BCA, as the
second highest contributor in Alabama during
the 2000–2009 period, helped make that state’s
Supreme Court elections the costliest in the
nation.
The Chamber also established the Institute for
Legal Reform, whose annual survey ranking
states’ “litigation climate” is widely cited, and
established three newspapers—in Texas, Illinois
and West Virginia—that report heavily on tortrelated issues. ILR has served as a funnel for getting Chamber money into state Supreme Court
independent campaigns.

More information
@justiceatstake.org

Business & Industry Political Education
Committee, Mississippi 2008

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

43

American Tort Reform
Association
The American Tort Reform Association was
founded in the 1980s to coordinate national
and state-level tort liability reform campaigns.
Receiving a mix of funding from Fortune 500
companies and big tobacco (according to Philip
Morris documents unearthed during tobacco
industry litigation, major tobacco companies
accounted for more than half of ATRA’s budget
in 1995), the group has invested money in several
major state Supreme Court elections.
In 2004, ATRA invested $765,000 into two
races, in Illinois and Mississippi. In 2006, it
contributed $503,000 to Americans Tired of
Lawsuit Abuse, a Virginia group that in turn
underwrote an independent campaign backing
two business-backed candidates for Washington
Supreme Court.11

The Secret Money Players:
Center for Individual
Freedom and the Law
Enforcement Alliance
of America
Two repeat players in state Supreme Court elections have worked zealously to keep their money
cloaked in mystery: the Center for Individual
Freedom (CFIF) and the Law Enforcement
Alliance of America. CFIF spent an estimated
$858,611 in Pennsylvania in 2007, on an independent campaign supporting Maureen LallyGreen’s unsuccessful state Supreme Court campaign. In 2008, the Center bought an estimated
$965,000 in air time in Alabama, supporting the
successful campaign of Republican Greg Shaw.
CFIF has guarded the identities of its donors,
suing two states, Pennsylvania and West Virginia,
to challenge their election disclosure laws. But its

roots appear likely to be grounded in big tobacco.
The group emerged in 1998, just as Philip Morris
was publicly cutting off millions in funding
for a mouthpiece organization, the National
Smokers Alliance. W. Thomas Humber, head
of the Alliance, was listed on the CFIF site as
the latter group’s founder, and two other senior
officers at the Smokers Alliance also took charge
of CFIF. The Center for Individual Freedom
didn’t even bother to switch buildings, operating for years at the same Alexandria, Virginia,
address as the Smokers Alliance. According to
documents, in 1999 Humber actively sought
tobacco industry financial backing on behalf of
the fledgling CFIF.12
The Law Enforcement Alliance of America
bought air time in Mississippi in 2002 and
2008, as well as Pennsylvania in 2001. One of
its 2008 Mississippi ads, accusing then-Justice
Oliver Diaz, Jr. of “voting for” killers and rapists in various cases, was pulled from the air by
some stations after a state-run campaign conduct
committee cried foul.13
Like many of the out-of-state groups running
independent TV ads in state Supreme Court
elections, LEAA is based in the Virginia suburbs
of Washington, D.C. According to a Public
Citizen project, called “Stealth PACs,”14 the
group received significant funding from the
National Rifle Association, but it is not clear
whether the NRA has directly invested in state
Supreme Court races.

Democratic Judicial
Campaign Committee
The Democratic Judicial Campaign
Committee was formed in 2007, but by the
end of the 2008 election campaign had still not
become a major financial player. Despite some
support from unions, and from Fred Baron, a
Texas plaintiffs’ lawyer, the group raised only

“The promise of America is broken if the public thinks that judges are
captured by special interests, controlled by the wealthy and powerful.”
—“Justice in Jeopardy,” 2003 American Bar Association report
44	

Who Played? Who Won?

“Not only does the law allow independent groups
to operate like Swiss banks, it allows them to
effectively to take the ‘r’ out of free speech.”
— Mike McCabe, Wisconsin Democracy Campaign

about $155,000 through the 2008 elections, and
disbursed only about $21,000 in direct aid to
campaigns in Wisconsin and Michigan.
The group’s goal is explicitly partisan, saying it
is “the only organization whose primary mission
is to elect Democratic judges to state courts.”
The group’s board of advisers includes former
Georgia Gov. Roy Barnes; former Wisconsin
Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager; former
Washington Insurance Commissioner Deborah
Senn, who lost a 2004 bid for attorney general
after the U.S. Chamber spent heavily on her
opponent; Democratic pollster Celinda Lake;
and Martin Frost, former Texas congressman.15

State-Level
Coalitions
Texas Titans:
Bob Perry and Fred Baron
During the past decade, Texas was home to two
super spenders who have been leading players in
state Supreme Court elections—and who have
extended their influence beyond state lines,
primarily for non-judicial politics.
Home builder Bob Perry has been a leading
funder of two Texas PACs that ranked second
and seventh in contributions to Texas Supreme
Court candidates over the 2000–2009 period: Texans for Lawsuit Reform and HillCo
Partners, which accounted for a combined
$429,045 in candidate contributions. One or
both Perry-funded PACs were Top 5 donors to
five of the six Texas justices elected in 2006
and 2008.16 (Until the Supreme Court’s 2010
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Citizens United ruling, Texas imposed strict
limits on corporate and PAC spending, and most
members of the all-Republican state Supreme
Court were backed prominently by corporate law
firms—including Haynes & Boone, Fulbright
& Jaworski, and Vinson & Elkins, former
corporate counsel to Enron.)
Perry is best known for his role in financing the
Swift Boat Veterans campaign against John
Kerry in the 2004 presidential campaign. The
Federalist Society hired the public relations firm
behind that campaign, CRC Communications,
to work on judicial selection issues, including
campaigns against merit selection in Missouri
and Tennessee.17
On the other side, Texas Democrats channeled their big-money backing through state
party PACs. In 2008, three poorly funded state
Supreme Court candidates were bailed out by
a $905,000 independent TV campaign by the
Texas Democratic Party, helping all three to
lose by respectably close margins. Two groups
with competing agendas, Texans for Lawsuit
Reform and the public-interest Texans for
Public Justice, both identified the same source:
plaintiffs’ lawyers, and specifically, Fred Baron,
a Dallas lawyer who was an asbestos litigation
pioneer. Baron gave more than $5 million to the
Texas Democratic Trust, which in turn gave $2
million to the state Democratic Party in 2008.
The two PACs were the two biggest spenders
in Texas politics in 2008.18 Baron, who died in
2008, was also credited with spearheading a
partisan challenge in which Democratic judges
swept most Republicans from the local bench in
Dallas, in 2006, and Houston in 2008.
Like Perry, Baron also was formidable on the
national stage, heading finance operations for
the 2004 John Kerry-John Edwards presidential
campaign and running Edwards’ 2008 presiden-

The late Fred Baron,
a Texas plaintiffs’
lawyer and contributor to the Democratic
Judicial Campaign
Committee

Bob Perry,
real estate magnate
and financier of Swift
Boat Veterans for
Truth

45

Focus on Alabama:
Shell Game on the Left
Did some state Democratic parties serve as conduits for plaintiffs’ lawyer money in 2007–08, allowing lawyers with court interests to funnel millions of dollars anonymously to state Supreme Court candidates? An examination of the 2008 elections in Texas (See “Texas Titans,” page 45) and Alabama
suggests that the answer is yes.
Without contributing a single dollar directly to Democrat Deborah Bell Paseur, the Montgomery law
firm of Beasley, Allen, Crow, Methvin, Portis & Miles funneled $606,000 to her treasury. Beasley Allen
used an arcane maze of 30 political action committees, which eventually routed the money to the
State Democratic Executive Committee. Other lawyers also contributed to the Democratic party,
directly or through other PACs, accounting for virtually all of the $1.6 million that the state party
donated to Paseur. That money represented 61 percent of the $2.7 million raised by Paseur, who lost
narrowly to Republican Greg Shaw.19

Without contributing a single dollar directly to Democrat
Deborah Bell Paseur, the Montgomery law firm of Beasley,
Allen, Crow, Methvin, Portis & Miles funneled $606,000 to
her treasury.
Beasley Allen used this route more than any other backer, successfully obscuring the firm’s financial
support for Paseur. A total of 52 checks, averaging $11,653, were written by six senior Beasley Allen
partners: Jere Locke Beasley, Greg Allen, Thomas J. Methvin, J. Cole Portis, W. Daniel Miles III, and
Andy D. Birchfield, Jr. The 30 PACs, mostly controlled by lobbyists John Teague or John D. Crawford,
then wrote checks to one another, so that by the time final transfers arrived at the Democratic committee, it was difficult, though not impossible, to trace the original source of the money.
Beasley Allen is a plaintiffs’ law firm, which has handled significant cases before the Alabama
Supreme Court. According to its web site, the firm has won multi-billion-dollar lawsuits, including a
$3.6 billion judgment against Exxon Corp. that was largely reversed by the state high court.
While Paseur was covertly receiving more than $600,000 from one law firm, she publicly accused her
Republican opponent of ethical conflicts, saying he was beholden to the energy industry. In campaign
ads, Paseur boasted that she “can’t be bought.”

46	

Who Played? Who Won?

PACs Used by Beasley Allen to Mask High Court Donations

Beasley-Allen

,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,

A PAC
AID PAC
BIP PAC
CGR PAC
COM pac
GA PAC
Group PAC
High St. PAC
I&C PAC
Poll PAC
RACE PAC
Resolution PAC
Speed PAC
Step PAC
SUN PAC
Supply PAC
T PAC
Watch PAC
Brother

,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,

Alabez
EcoDev
Enviro
Franklin
Green
Growth
JDC PAC
Jefferson PAC
Vision PAC
st Century

,

Eagle PAC

,

To State Democrats



Direct to Deborah Bell Paseur

Total contributed
to John Teague PACs

,

Total contributed
to John D. Crawford PACs

,

Alabama
Democratic
Party

 eived

,



lly rec
Deborah
Bell Paseur
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

uits.
a
d
u
t
n
n
o
e
c
Ev
r, via
u
e
s
a
by P

Figure 28.
47

“A fundamental principle of our democracy is that
judges must be perceived as beyond price. When
litigants go to court, they want
a judge who will decide the
case based on the facts and
the law. They do not want
the umpire calling balls and
strikes before the game has
begun.”
—Ann Walsh Bradley, Wisconsin Supreme
Court justice

tial bid. Baron was one of the few major national
donors to the Democratic Judicial Campaign
Committee, whose goal was to offer national
financial support to state Supreme Court candidates. Baron gave $10,000 to the DJCC.

Michigan/Wisconsin:
What’s Behind the Curtain?
In two of the Midwest’s costliest states in
2007–08, Michigan and Wisconsin, the real
money was largely undisclosed. The Wisconsin
Democracy Campaign estimated that independent campaigns accounted for 90 percent of TV
ad costs in the 2008 Michael Gableman-Louis
Butler race, and 80 percent of all spending in the
election campaign.
In Michigan, three independent TV campaigns—run by the Michigan Democratic
Committee, the Michigan Republican Party
and the Michigan Chamber of Commerce—
accounted for two-thirds of all TV spending.
The estimated $2.4 million spent by the groups

48	

nearly equaled the $2.6 million raised by candidates Cliff Taylor and Diane Hathaway.
Both states had one thing in common: campaign
disclosure laws and court rulings that allowed
independent groups to advertise with impunity
while concealing their funding sources.
Although Wisconsin Manufacturers &
Commerce is affiliated with both the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce and the National
Association of Manufacturers, while the
Greater Wisconsin Committee clearly had
Democratic leadership and the support of plaintiffs’ lawyers and unions, it was difficult to know
their original money sources, or those for campaigns run by the out-of-state Club for Growth
and Coalition for America’s Families.
In an opinion column, Mike McCabe, executive director of the Wisconsin Democracy
Campaign, said all the groups had operated
as a pass-through for secret money, making a
shambles out of any public transparency: “Not
only does [the law] allow them to operate like
Swiss banks,” McCabe wrote, “it allows them to
effectively take the ‘r’ out of free speech.”20
Who Played? Who Won?

Georgia:
Here Today,
Gone Tomorrow

Georgia Supreme
Court Chief Justice
Carol Hunstein
withstood a severe
2006 challenge that
was funded heavily by
the American Justice
Partnership.

As recently as 2005, there was no Safety and
Prosperity Coalition in Georgia, and by 2007,
the group had all but evaporated, with records
showing virtually no contributions or operating
funds.
But during the Georgia Supreme Court election
of 2006, the Safety and Prosperity Coalition was
practically unrivaled in size or stature. Aided by
national groups, it swiftly raised $1.8 million,
unleashing a harsh television assault against
Chief Justice Carol Hunstein.
The Coalition was formed in January 2006
by Eric Dial, development director for an
American Justice Partnership ally, the
Southeastern Legal Foundation. It raised
$300,000 in contributions from corporations
including DaimlerChrysler, Coca-Cola Bottlers,
the American Insurance Association, and the
Georgia Hospital Association.
The Michigan-based American Justice
Partnership then cut checks totaling $1.3 mil-

lion, reporting its address as the National
Association of Manufacturers’ D.C. headquarters. The AJP money constituted the heart of the
Safety and Prosperity Coalition’s $1.7 million
funding. In spite of the significant spending
against her, Hunstein defeated challenger Mike
Wiggins.21

“There is no system for selecting
judges that will guarantee a
judge’s character. . . .
But we can reduce the
perception that money and
politics matter more than merit
and performance.”
—The late Thomas Moyer, Ohio Chief Justice

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

49

The Battle for
ca’s Courts,
America’s Courts

Greater Wisconsin Committee

Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce

The Left
Plaintiffs’ lawyers and unions formed one key side in
the battle for America’s courts that reached full force
in 2000-2009. Their primary goals were to elect judges
sympathetic to them on tort-reform and product liability
Illinois
issues.

Michigan Democrats
Democrats/Lawyers

Unlike their conservative counterparts, these groups
generally organized and raised funds at the state level.
One national group, the Democratic Judicial Campaign
Committee based in Washington, D.C., failed to play a
major financial role. Especially in Alabama, Illinois and
Texas, lawyers contributed cash through the Democratic
Party to mask their support of candidates.

And for the Sake of the Kids

While the lawyers and unions spent millions on swing
elections, they lost ground in several key states early in
the decade, notably including Alabama, Illinois, Michigan,
Illinois Republicans/Chamber
Mississippi, Ohio, West Virginia and Wisconsin, after
previously losing control of courts in Texas and Louisiana.
Plaintiffs’ lawyers regained the upper hand in Michigan in
2008, in a year that signaled a possible broader comeback.
Key Players
Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association

American Justice Partner

of Commerce

Illinois Civil Justice League

Greater Wisconsin Committee
Michigan Democratic Party
Alabama Democrats/plaintiffs’ lawyers
Illinois Democrats/plaintiffs’Texas
lawyers

A

Democrats

Texas Democrats/plaintiffs’ lawyers
Democratic Judicial Campaign Committee
The late Fred Baron

UNIONS

IMPAC Fund

Safety & Pro
Alabama Democrats/Lawyers

Business Council o

50	

LAWYERS

Alabama
Civil
Who Played?
Who Won?

Justice Re

The Battle for
America’s Courts

e

Howard Rich
Pennsylvania Republican Committee

rship

Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association

American Taxpayers Alliance

Center for Individual Freedom
The Right
Business groups and other conservative organizations
organized nationally as the decade started, hoping to
reverse what they perceived as excess influence on
elected courts
by the plaintiff
bar.
Democratic
Judicial
Campaign Committee

At least eight national groups, many based in or near
Washington, D.C., have spent directly or indirectly on
state Supreme Court elections. While the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce worked largely through its state chapters,
the National
Association
of Manufacturers
a
National
Association
of created
Manufacturers
Michigan-based spinoff, the American Justice Partnership,
to coordinate campaign efforts. Two national spenders, the Center for Individual Freedom and the Law
Enforcement Alliance of America, have historic ties to
big tobacco and the gun lobby, respectively, but their
Chamber
of Commerce/State
Affiliate
financial U.S.
backing
for specific court
election campaigns
remains unknown.
The national strategy proved highly effective, winning
control of numerous state courts before suffering a partial reversal in 2008, when three business-backed chief
justices were voted out of office.

Law Enforcement Alliance of America

Key Players
U.S. Chamber of Commerce/State Chapters

American Tort Reform Association

Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse

American Justice Partnership/National Association of
Manufacturers
Center for Individual Freedom

NATIONAL
Law Enforcement Alliance of America

RIFLE ASSOCIA

American Tort Reform Association
American Taxpayers Alliance
Club for Growth
Pennsylvania State Republicans
Business Council of Alabama

osperity Coalition
MEDICAL INDUSTRY

of Alabama

eform Committee
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Figure 38.

51

Quotes from the Decade
“Acknowledging that judicial elections are here to
stay does not mean we have to accept spectacularly
dysfunctional electoral systems like the one on display
in West Virginia. If a state plans to embrace judicial
elections, it should shield judges from having to collect
campaign donations from the very groups that appear
before them.”

—Amanda Frost, American University law professor
“The temptations of corporate cash mean that in those states where
judicial elections still prevail there hangs a crooked sign on every
courthouse reading, ‘Justice for Sale.’”

—Bill Moyers, journalist

“Now as never before, reinvigorating
recusal is truly necessary to preserve the
court system that Chief Justice Rehnquist
called the ‘crown jewel’ of our American
experiment.”

—Thomas R. Phillips, Retired Chief Justice,
Supreme Court of Texas, in “Fair Courts: Setting
Recusal Standards” (Brennan Center)

“I’ve been around West Virginia long enough to
know that politicians don’t stay bought.”

—Don
Blankenship, New York Times interview
52	

Who Played? Who Won?

“I am extremely proud of what Caperton v. Massey has accomplished
in just a short period of time. The decision by the Court is leading to
sweeping changes across the country in judicial elections and rules
for recusal that will protect citizens from big money campaign donors. 
Over time, these reforms will lead to
fairer courts and help restore faith in
our judicial system. For the families of
Harman Mining, however, the pursuit of
justice remains an ongoing battle.”

—Hugh Caperton, litigant in
Caperton v. Massey

Michigan’s new recusal rule “permits a justice’s
recusal where that justice is unable to render
an unbiased decision and unable or unwilling to
acknowledge that fact. The justice system and
this Court can only be stronger for it.”

—Michigan Chief Justice Marilyn Kelly

“We had a 10-year plan to take all this down. . .
And if we do it right, I think we can pretty well dismantle the entire
regulatory regime that is called campaign finance law.”

—Lawyer James Bopp, after Citizens United ruling

“It’s a rotten system, Wes.”
“How do you fix it?”
“Either take away the private money and finance the
races with public funds or switch to appointments.”

—John Grisham, The Appeal

Chapter 3 Notes
1.	

Joshua Green, “Karl Rove in a Corner,” Atlantic,
November 2004, http://www.theatlantic.com/
doc/200411/green.

2.	 Richard Woodbury, “Is Justice for Sale?” Time magazine, Jan. 11, 1988, available at http://www.time.com/
time/magazine/article/0,9171,966426,00.html. “60
Minutes” report is cited by multiple sources, including http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/
justice/interviews/hill.html.
3.	 U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Tom
Donohue, March 11, 2002, speech to Illinois Chamber
of Commerce, available at: http://www.uschamber.
com/press/speeches/2002/020311tjd_illinois.htm.
4.	 Robert Lenzner and Matthew Miller, “Buying
Justice,” Forbes.com, July 21, 2003, available at http://
www.forbes.com/forbes/2003/0721/064_print.html.
5.	

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s state court campaign received broad attention in the mainstream and
business media. Details on the Chamber campaign
and its electoral successes are drawn from the 2003
Forbes article, and from articles that include the
following: William Glaberson, “U.S. Chamber Will
Promote Business Views in Court Races,” New York
Times, October 22, 2000; Jim VandeHei, “Political
Cover: Major Business Lobby Wins Back Its Clout By
Dispensing Favors–Some Members Can Hide Behind
Chamber’s Name To Pursue Private Ends–Targeting
`Unfriendly’ Judges,” Wall Street Journal, Sept. 11,
2001; “Battle Over the Courts,” Business Week, Sept.
27, 2004.

6.	 “Lawyers asked to help judge clear debt,” Jackson
Clarion-Ledger, Dec. 16, 2008. See also commentary
in “Choose Judges on Merit” blog, Pennsylvanians
for Modern Courts, at http://judgesonmerit.org/tag/
jim-kitchens/.
7.	 Oregon 2006 contribution is available at www.followthemoney.org. Georgia expenditure available at
Georgia State Ethics Commission, http://ethics.georgia.gov/Reports/Campaign/Campaign_ByName.aspx;
contribution to Americans Tired of Lawuit Abuse
at, http://www.campaignmoney.com/political/527/
americans_tired_of_lawsuit_abuse.asp; donation
to Improve Mississippi PAC (IMPAC), Mississippi
Secretary of State’s Office, http://www.sos.state.
ms.us/PDF-Out/000000059296.pdf

12.	 In a July 16, 1999, letter on National Smokers Alliance
letterhead, NSA president Humber sought funding
from Lorillard Tobacco Co. and mentioned “a development project, the Center for Individual Freedom,
which might be of some interest to Lorillard’s parent
or associated companies” (http://legacy.library.ucsf.
edu/tid/lwd62d00/pdf). A 2002 motion in federal
court in Pennsylvania listed the Center for Individual
Freedom’s address as 901 N. Washington St.,
Alexandria, Va., same as the Smokers Alliance (http://
www.cfif.org/htdocs/legal_issues/legal_updates/
us_supreme_court/checkoff_motion.pdf). CFIF later
moved. Humber, Eric Schippers and David Nummy
were early leaders of CFIF, and had leadership roles in
the smokers alliance.
13.	 “Mud Flies, Spending Soars in Mississippi,”
Gavel Grab, Oct. 30, 2008, http://www.gavelgrab.
org/?p=670. See also, “Mississippi Muck,” part of
a Nov. 26, 2008, www.factcheck.org report on the
Michigan and Mississippi Supreme Court campaigns.
14.	 www.stealthpacs.org, Public Citizen project to list
financial resources of advocacy groups.
15.	 The Democratic Judicial Campaign Committee web
site (www.djcc.org) contains a national map, analyzing each elected court’s political makeup.
16.	 Data for this calculation are drawn from the National
Institute on Money in State Politics, www.followthemoney.org.
17.	 See “Swift-Boating the Courts: Missouri Edition,”
Gavel Grab, June 11, 2008 (www.gavelgrab.
org/?p=330), and “Tennessee Poll Leaves Out Key
Question to Get Desired Answer,” Gavel Grab, Feb.
27, 2008 (http://www.gavelgrab.org/?p=192).
18.	 Texans for Public Justice report on 2008 campaign
spending is at http://info.tpj.org/reports/txpac08/
chapter2.html. Texans for Lawsuit Reform report is at
http://www.tlrpac.com/news-08-1121.php.

9.	 Secretary of State data, compiled by Public Citizen,
at http://www.citizen.org/congress/article_redirect.
cfm?ID=15877.

19.	 Alabama Secretary of State’s Office, 2008 campaign
finance reports. Information is derived by examining
reports of political action committees that eventually wrote checks to the State Democratic Executive
Committee.

10.	 Rachel Paine Caufield, American Judicature
Society, “Judges Under Attack, 2005 paper for Iowa
Judges’Conference, http://www.ajs.org/selection/docs/
caufield_ia_judges_conference.pdf.

20.	 Mike McCabe, “A Traffic Jam on the Low Road of
Politics,” BizTimes.com, Oct. 22, 2008, http://www.
biztimes.com/blogs/milwaukee-biz-blog/2008/10/22/atraffic-jam-on-the-low-road-of-politics.

11.	 Spending by ATRA and the Institute for Legal
Reform is documented in “Fringe Tactics,” a 2005
report by Rachel Weiss for the National Institute on
Money in State Politics (http://www.followthemoney.
org/press/Reports/200508251.pdf). ATRA’s contribution to Americans Tired of Lawuit Abuse is at

21.	 Safety and Prosperity Coalition financial information is available at Georgia State Ethics Commission,
http://ethics.georgia.gov/Reports/Campaign/
Campaign_ByName.aspx.

8.	 See expenditure filings cited in previous footnote.

54	

campaignmoney.com, http://www.campaignmoney.
com/political/527/americans_tired_of_lawsuit_abuse.
asp. ATRA also issued a statement after the 2002
election, claiming “key judicial election victories for
civil justice reform” in Alabama, Illinois, Michigan,
Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and
Washington state (Liability and Insurance Weekly,
Nov. 12, 2002, http://www.allbusiness.com/financeinsurance/insurance-carriers-related/404858-1.html).

Who Played? Who Won?

Chapter 4

Litigation:
The Battle Inside
the Courtroom
Some of the most significant developments
affecting state judicial elections have occurred
in federal court, where increasingly thorny questions of judicial independence and conduct on
the campaign trail have gone for resolution. The
past decade has seen important U.S. Supreme
Court cases involving how judges can campaign, when campaign spending should trigger
a judge’s recusal, and whether corporations and
unions can pour their treasuries directly into
election campaigns. Much of this litigation
has been generated by interest groups as a new
front in their efforts to strengthen or erode
rules designed to insulate court decisions from
special-interest campaign pressure.

Caperton v. Massey:
When Judges
Must Step Aside
Caperton v. Massey, decided in June 2009, provided a national lesson in what can go wrong
when big money supporters and pending
lit ig at ion

coincide in the courtroom. Caperton has moved
recusal—when a judge steps aside from a case to
prevent ethical conflict—to the national stage.
And it has created incentives for every state to
make sure that their recusal procedures have not
been rendered ineffective by the new politics of
judicial elections.
The case involved the campaign of Brent D.
Benjamin, a lawyer who in 2004 ran for a seat
on the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals
against incumbent Warren McGraw. The campaign became notorious nationwide for its bitter
tone, no-holds-barred attacks, and extraordinarily high spending. Especially noteworthy
were the circumstances surrounding Benjamin’s
principal financial supporter, Don Blankenship.
At the time, Blankenship, CEO of Massey Coal
Co., was embroiled in a lawsuit with Harman
Mining Corp., and Massey stood to lose $50 million in damages after a jury found Massey liable
for fraudulent misrepresentation and tortious
interference with existing contractual relations.
As post-verdict motions were under consideration, it became clear that the case was bound
for the state Supreme Court of Appeals

West Virginia Justice
Brent D. Benjamin
was at the heart
of the landmark
Caperton v. Massey
case.

*

Chapter 4 notes
are on page 66.

Figure 30.

gin of 53-47 percent. More than 60 percent of
Benjamin’s total campaign support came from
Blankenship’s pockets.

A photo of West
Virginia Chief Justice
Elliott “Spike”
Maynard (left), on
vacation in the Riviera
with coal executive
Don Blankenship, contributed to Maynard’s
2008 election defeat.

—just as the Benjamin-McGraw campaign was
heating up.
Blankenship went on to spend $3 million of
his personal funds to support Benjamin’s campaign, both by promoting Benjamin and attacking his opponent. That included $2.5 million
Blankenship contributed to a 527 group called
And For the Sake of the Kids, whose purported
mission was to defeat Warren McGraw, and
$500,000 Blankenship spent independently. The
$3 million spent by Blankenship was three times
the amount spent by Benjamin’s own campaign.
Benjamin went on to defeat McGraw by a mar-

When the case came before the West Virginia
Supreme Court of Appeals almost two years
later, Justice Benjamin refused to recuse himself.
He cast the deciding vote in a 3-2 decision in
favor of Blankenship’s company, reversing the
damages awarded to Harman Mining. Articles
and op-eds across the country likened the scenario to a plot out of a John Grisham novel,
and indeed, Grisham cited West Virginia as
an inspiration for his Mississippi-based novel
“The Appeal.” What’s more, West Virginians
were skeptical that Justice Benjamin—in spite
of his protestations to the contrary—could
appear unbiased in hearing the case. According
to a 2008 survey, over 67% of West Virginians
doubted that Justice Benjamin would be fair and
impartial in considering the case before him,
even if he claimed otherwise.1
Hugh Caperton, owner of Harman Mining,
appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, where he
was represented by Theodore B. Olson, former
Solicitor General of the United States under
George W. Bush. “The improper appearance
created by money in judicial elections is one of
the most important issues facing our judicial

Who Decides What Is Fair and Impartial?
In a March 3, 2009, hearing, lawyers for Caperton and Massey offered U.S. Supreme Court justices two starkly different
standards for deciding whether a judge might have to avoid a case involving a major campaign supporter.

“If you were in Justice Benjamin’s situation, do you really think you
would be incapable of rendering an impartial decision in a case
involving Massey? Because if the answer to that is no. . . then there’s no
justification for saying that Justice Benjamin would.”
—Andrew Frey, representing Massey Coal Co.

“Would a detached observer conclude that a fair and impartial hearing would be possible?
So instead of the question that Mr. Frey was asking. . . I would like to ask you to ask this
question: If this was going to be the judge in your case, would
you think it would be fair, and would it be a fair tribunal, if the
judge in your case was selected with a $3 million subsidy by
your opponent?”
—Theodore B. Olson, representing Hugh Caperton

56	

Litigation: The Battle Inside the Courtroom

An Earlier Case of Election Bias?
Several years before the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Caperton v. Massey, the high court
declined to hear a case that raised similar issues of potential bias by an elected judge.
Avery v. State Farm Mutual Automobile
Ins. Co. involved the most expensive
“It cost just over $9 million for that race.
state judicial campaign in United
As you might have guessed, the winner of
States history, a 2004 contest in
that race got his biggest contributions from a company that
which Illinois Appellate Judge Gordon
had an appeal pending before the Illinois Supreme Court.
Maag and then-circuit Judge Lloyd
You like that?”
Karmeier raised a total of $9.3 million. Karmeier, who received over
—Sandra Day O’Connor , U.S. Supreme Court Justice
$350,000 in direct contributions from
employees, lawyers and others linked
to State Farm Insurance, and over $1 million more from groups of which State Farm was a member
or to which it contributed, won the election.
Justice Karmeier then refused to recuse himself from Avery, which, as the timeline illustrates, was
pending before the Illinois Supreme Court during the entire campaign. The stakes in Avery were
hardly trivial. Justice Karmeier cast the decisive vote to reverse a verdict on breach of claims valued
at over $450 million against State Farm.

Chronology Of Avery v. State Farm Controversy
May, 2003
Oral Argument
in Avery heard in
the Illinois
Supreme Court

Avery case not decided and left pending
before Supreme Court during entire
2004 Campaign.
November, 2004
Karmeier wins: Karmeier calls
funding “obscene,” yet declines to
recuse from Avery

March, 2006
U.S. Supreme
Court denies
cert in Avery

2006

2003
2004 Illinois Supreme
Court Campaign.
Big Money Flows In

August. 2005
Karmeier casts deciding vote in
Avery, overturning $450 Million+
judgment against State Farm.
Over $4 Million in total
contributions to Karmeier.

Figure 31.

“The juxtaposition of gigantic campaign contributions and favorable judgments
for contributors creates a haze of suspicion over the highest court in Illinois. . . .
Although Mr. Karmeier is an intelligent and no doubt honest man, the manner of his
election will cast doubt over every vote he casts in a business case.”
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

57

The Caperton Coalition:
Diverse Groups Rally to Defend Impartial Justice
A striking aspect of the Caperton v. Massey recusal case was the exceptionally broad range of groups—including businesses,
retired justices, and civic and legal organizations—urging that a West Virginia justice not hear a case involving his biggest
campaign benefactor.
After the ruling, a New York Times editorial noted, “The only truly alarming thing about Monday’s decision was that it was not
unanimous. The case drew an unusual array of friend-of-court briefs from across the political spectrum, and such an extreme
case about an ethical matter that should transcend ideology should have united all nine justices.”
Among the notable briefs:

“Essential to public confidence in the judiciary is the assurance that justice is
not for sale and that legal disputes will be resolved by fair and impartial judicial
officers. [Justice Benjamin’s refusal to recuse] created an
appearance of bias that would diminish the integrity of the
judicial process in the eyes of any reasonable person.”
—The Committee for Economic Development, Intel Corp., Lockheed Martin Corp.,
Pepsico, Wal-Mart Stores, and Transparency International USA

“The integrity of the judicial process requires that judges avoid
both actual bias and the reasonable appearance of bias. … Few
actions jeopardize public trust in the judicial process more than
a judge’s failure to recuse in a case brought by or against a
substantial contributor.”
—American Bar Association

“All amici view with alarm the increasing expense of mounting a serious campaign for
election to a state supreme court, and with even greater alarm the increasing level
of independent expenditures in these elections. . . . Substantial financial support of
a judicial candidate—whether contributions to the judge’s campaign committee or
independent expenditures—can influence a judge’s future decisions, both consciously
and unconsciously.”
—27 former state Supreme Court Chief Justices and Justices

58	

Litigation: The Battle Inside the Courtroom

“The escalation of judicial campaign spending traps
business leaders into a classic ‘prisoner’s dilemma.’
. . . A corporation must consider the likelihood that its
opponent in high-stakes litigation may actively support
one or more of the judges that will hear its case.
Mandatory recusal is necessary to stanch this campaign spending arms race and
maintain the integrity of the judicial system.”
—The Center for Political Accountability and Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research at the Wharton School

“The $3 million in expenditures; the fact that those expenditures
represented more than all other financial support for Justice
Benjamin combined; the sole interested source of those funds;
the timing of the expenditures; and the other facts of this case
are so egregious—by today’s standards at least—that they offer
the Court the ideal opportunity to reinforce one of the most fundamental rights in
any system based on the rule of law: the right to a fair hearing before an impartial
arbiter.”
—Brennan Center for Justice, Campaign Legal Center, Reform Institute

“Judicial elections have created a crisis of confidence.
National surveys from 2001 and 2004 found that over 70% of
Americans believe that campaign contributions have at least
some influence on judges’ decisions in the courtroom.”
—Justice at Stake Campaign (in a brief including 27 civic reform groups)2
Other briefs urging recusal were submitted by: the American Association for Justice; the American Academy of Appellate
Lawyers; the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers.

rief
,
An Influential B
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sides in the case
es
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Ju
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“Under ce
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Theth
New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	
59
its, is unfounde
m
b
su
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n
re
fe
n
Co
tices added:
The state chief jus

“Just as no man is allowed to be a judge in his own
cause, similar fears of bias can arise when—without
the other parties’ consent—a man chooses the judge
in his own cause.”
—Caperton v. Massey opinion, authored by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy
system today,” said Olson. “A line needs to
be drawn somewhere to prevent a judge from
hearing cases involving a person who has made
massive campaign contributions to benefit the
judge.”3
As the Brennan Center for Justice wrote in its
amicus brief to the Supreme Court: “The $3 million in expenditures; the fact that those expenditures represented more than all other financial
support for Justice Benjamin combined; the sole
interested source of those funds; the timing of
the expenditures; and the other facts of this case
are so egregious—by today’s standards at least—
that they offer the Court the ideal opportunity
to reinforce one of the most fundamental rights
in any system based on the rule of law: the right
to a fair hearing before an impartial arbiter.”4
A broad coalition of strange bedfellows agreed
(see: “The Caperton Coalition,” Pages 58 and 59).
Most notably, the Conference of Chief Justices,
which includes the chief justice of every state
and U.S. territory, filed its own amicus brief.
Consistent with the Conference’s policy, the
brief did not formally support either party, but
its contents made clear that on the fundamental
question of law, the Conference supported the
legal arguments advanced by Caperton: “under
certain circumstances, the Constitution may
require the disqualification of a judge in a
particular matter because of extraordinarily outof-line campaign support from a source that has
a substantial stake in the proceedings.”5
On June 8, 2009, the U.S. Supreme Court issued
its ruling. In a 5-4 opinion written by Justice
Kennedy, the court concluded that, given the
“serious risk of actual bias,” the Constitution’s
60	

Due Process Clause required the recusal of
Justice Benjamin, calling the facts of the case
“extreme by any measure.” The Court reached
its conclusion that Blankenship had a “significant and disproportionate influence” in Justice
Benjamin’s placement on the court, based upon
the total amount of money Blankenship spent
on the election, its size compared to the total
amount spent on the election, and the effect
such expenditures seemed to have on the election’s outcome.6
The timing of the expenditures was also a crucial factor in the decision. According to Justice
Kennedy, “[I]t was reasonably foreseeable, when
the campaign contributions were made, that
the pending case would be before the newly
elected justice.”7 There was no claim of quid pro
quo collusion between Blankenship and Justice
Benjamin, but the contributions nonetheless
constituted a “serious, objective risk of actual
bias” that required recusal, both because of their
timing and relative size.
Although four justices dissented, no one on the
Court disputed that states can enact disqualification standards even more rigorous than the
Constitution’s due process requirements. “States
are, of course, free to adopt broader recusal rules
than the Constitution requires,” Chief Justice
John G. Roberts Jr. wrote, “and every State has.”
Indeed, former Texas Chief Justice Thomas
Phillips argues that the most important issue in
the case was the Court’s first-ever acknowledgment that even lawful contributions made to
the campaign of a judge could warrant his or
her recusal, if such support was “so substantial
and overwhelming” as to raise due process
concerns.8
Litigation: The Battle Inside the Courtroom

“We neither assert nor imply that the First
Amendment requires campaigns for judicial
office to sound the same as those for
legislative office.”
—Republican Party of Minnesota v. White opinion,
authored by Justice Antonin Scalia
A variety of post–Caperton reforms are available,
including empaneling neutral judges to hear
recusal motions against a particular judge, creating per se rules for disqualification, and enhancing disclosure requirements for judges as well as
litigants. Americans agree that reform is needed:
A 2009 Justice at Stake poll showed that more
than 80 percent of all voters support the idea of a
different judge deciding on recusal requests, and
agree that judges should not hear cases involving
major campaign backers.9
In November 2009, Michigan’s Supreme Court
became the nation’s first high court to adopt
new recusal rules, after Caperton, that allow the
entire court to review recusal motions, and disqualify individual justices from cases that pose
possible ethics violations.

Judicial Speech:
How Far Can
Candidates Go?
Another decision that is reshaping the rules
around judicial elections is the 2002 Supreme
Court ruling in Republican Party of Minnesota v.
White, holding that judicial candidates cannot
be barred from announcing their positions on
political issues. Since White, federal courts have
divided on what other judicial campaign speech
regulations conform with the First Amendment.
ABA President Robert Hirshon predicted White
would “open Pandora’s box.”
White has fueled a boom in additional litigation seeking to loosen restrictions on judicial
campaign speech, though federal courts remain
split on how far candidates can go. For example,
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

in Weaver v. Bonner (2002), the 11th Circuit
struck down a prohibition on Georgia judicial candidates personally soliciting campaign
contributions, and a prohibition on false or
misleading campaign speech. Despite the U.S.
Supreme Court’s clear statement in White that
it “neither assert[ed] nor impl[ied] that the First
Amendment requires campaigns for judicial
office to sound the same as those for legislative office,”10 the 11th Circuit asserted “that the
Supreme Court’s decision in White suggests
that the standard for [First Amendment review
of] judicial elections should be the same as the
standard for legislative and executive elections.”11
Similarly a federal district court in Wisconsin
overturned in Siefert v. Alexander (2009) a rule
barring judges, candidates for judicial office
and judges-elect from belonging to a political
party.12
Other courts, however, have not agreed with
post-White challenges to judicial canons, or have
upheld canons that were revised or adopted to
achieve a more finely tuned balance between free
speech and due process rights. (A revised Model
Code of Judicial Conduct adopted by the ABA
House of Delegates in 2007 included numerous
changes made in light of White, and 15 states had
adopted these restrictions on speech by judges
and judicial candidates as of July 2009.)
In Indiana, for example, a federal court at first
enjoined enforcement of a disputed judicial rule
restricting partisan activity. After the state’s
Supreme Court adopted a new, narrower version, the court vacated its injunction in the case,
Bauer v. Shepard (2009). The same federal court
rejected a legal attack on judicial conduct rules
restricting partisan political activities, including
61

one that bars a judge or judicial candidate from
holding office in a political organization or acting as a leader in it.
As formal rules fall, professional norms of
conduct have become more important. In 2008,
the Justice at Stake Campaign and the Midwest
Democracy Network recommended a set of
guidelines13 to help judicial candidates steer clear
of special interest pressures and political agendas. It includes recommendations that judicial
candidates:
➜➜ Use election campaigns as an opportunity to educate the public about how
courts work, how they protect civil
liberties, and where they fit in the
Constitution’s system of checks and balances.
➜➜ Avoid expressing views—in public and
in interest group questionnaires—on
issues they might rule on. Candidates
should use their responses to explain
why stating one’s views on controversial
issues is both inappropriate and damaging to public belief in impartial justice.
Elected judges should be ready to recuse
themselves from cases involving issues
they do publicly discuss.
➜➜ Limit how much money they will take
from a single source or category of
contributor—and never make promises
“explicit or implied,” that from the
bench, cases will be decided in a particular way.
➜➜ Promote civil campaigns by disassociating themselves from groups that make
misleading statements about an opponent, and by working with campaign
conduct committees to ensure clean
campaigns.

Campaign Finance Returns
to the High Court
Money may be endemic to politics, but specialinterest money poses a unique threat to courts,
which unlike legislators and governors have a
constitutional obligation to be impartial. Such
spending creates the appearance of unequal
influence, in a branch that represents, above
all, the right to an equal, fair hearing before the
law.
That’s why lawmakers in North Carolina established public financing for appellate court races
in 2002, reducing pressure on judicial candidates
to raise money from those appearing in court. In
part to guard against the reality or appearance
of partiality, disclosure laws are designed to shed
light on who is spending on court elections.
Indeed, it was a West Virginia law that revealed
the role of Don Blankenship, the coal executive
who spent $3 million to sway a Supreme Court
election, because he had to document his massive independent expenditures.
But increasingly, such reforms are under assault,
facing court challenges alleging that they violate
First Amendment free-speech rights. Many of
these cases don’t single out judicial elections.
But as a whole, they seek a broad dismantling
of campaign finance rules that could have a
profound effect on elected courts, by encouraging an unlimited boom in special interest
campaigns to “buy justice.” (See “Balancing Two
Constitutional Rights,” Page 64.) Days after the
Citizens United ruling in January 2010, lawyer
James Bopp, Jr. told the New York Times: “We
had a 10-year plan to take all this down…And
if we do it right, I think we can pretty well dis-

“At a time when concerns about the
conduct of judicial elections have reached
a fever pitch, the Court today unleashes the
floodgates of corporate and union general
treasury spending in these races.”
62	

–Justice John Paul Stevens,
from dissent in Citizens United v. Federal
Election Commission
Litigation: The Battle Inside the Courtroom

mantle the entire regulatory regime that is called
campaign finance law.”14
In the three decades since the U.S. Supreme
Court upheld public financing and contribution
limits for federal elections, much of the debate
has focused on spending by independent campaigns. In judicial elections, these independent
expenditures frequently eclipse the candidates’
official campaigns. In 2008, four of the five most
expensive ad campaigns were run by independent groups, only one by a candidate.
In Caperton v. Massey, which involved an independent campaign, the Supreme Court found
that large independent expenditures, not just
donations to candidates, can in some cases
threaten the proper functioning of elected state
courts, by creating an unacceptable potential for
bias favoring a campaign benefactor.
The courts have provided significant victories
for the public’s right to enact campaign finance

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

laws. In Duke v. Leake, the Fourth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals unanimously upheld North
Carolina’s public financing law, including its
rescue and trigger funds provisions and reporting requirements. And while some federal courts
have struck down disclosure requirements for
independent groups, even as the Supreme Court
has repeatedly affirmed such laws, disclosure
rules have been upheld and remain in effect in
other states.

More information
@justiceatstake.org

The most recent challenge, Citizens United v.
Federal Election Commission, may be the biggest
yet. In June 2009, the Supreme Court asked
for an additional special hearing, to consider
whether a federal ban on election spending by
corporations violated the First Amendment.
(The original federal corporate limits date to
1907, and such laws had been upheld by the U.S.
Supreme Court in 1990 and 2003.)
Figure 32.

63

“What latitude is there for trying to impose
more ex ante limits on the kind of judge
buying. . . that led to the Caperton ruling?
Now, I strongly support First Amendment
limits on expenditure limitations in the
political campaign context, but I think there
is no reason to think they apply exactly the
same way in judicial election contexts.”
–Kathleen Sullivan,
Stanford University law professor

An amicus brief filed by Justice at Stake and 19
other reform groups warned that ending the corporate treasury ban could engulf elected courts
with special interest money, if similar state laws
also were struck down. “Special interest spending on judicial elections—by corporations, labor
unions, and other groups—poses an unprecedented threat to public trust in the courts and
to the rights of litigants,” said the brief, which
added, “As other groups felt pressure to match
this corporate treasury spending, these issues
would only snowball.”15
Citing the 2009 Caperton ruling, the brief added:
“This Court itself held last term … that some
independent expenditures in judicial campaigns
are so excessive that they in fact deny litigants
due process under the law. If corporate treasury
spending were unregulated in judicial elections,
these concerns would only get worse.”
In January 2010, the Supreme Court voted 5-4
to declare corporate spending bans unconstitutional. In his dissent, Justice John Paul Stevens
cited the Justice at Stake amicus brief, warning
that the ruling could have an especially heavy
impact on state court elections. “At a time when
concerns about the conduct of judicial elections
have reached a fever pitch,” Stevens wrote, “the
Court today unleashes the floodgates of corporate and union general treasury spending in
these races.”

64	

Balancing Two
Constitutional Rights:
Free Speech
and Fair Trials
The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that properly crafted campaign laws serve compelling
government interests and are consistent with the
First Amendment. But opponents of campaign
reform often file challenges invoking the First
Amendment—broadly and sometimes improperly—in order to cripple efforts to deal with the
tide of money flooding our political system.
Shortly after Watergate, the Court upheld campaign contribution limits in Buckley v. Valeo,
rejecting the argument that the First Amendment
overrode the government’s compelling interest in
preventing corruption.
Financial disclosure laws have been held to
serve another compelling interest: informing the
public about who is seeking to win government
influence through election spending.16 A 2007
ruling, Wisconsin Right to Life v. Federal Election
Commission, exempted non-election issue ads
from campaign regulation, but it didn’t give
advocacy groups a blank check to bypass financial disclosure laws. When supposed issue ads
are “susceptible of no reasonable interpretation
other than as an appeal to vote for or against a
specific candidate,” they can be regulated like
any other election ad, the Supreme Court ruled.
Much of the First Amendment debate has not
focused on whether campaign regulation is
constitutional for candidates on the ballot—
overwhelmingly, such laws have been upheld—
but how campaign laws relate to special-interest
groups running independent campaigns. That
split was reflected in the controversial ruling in
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.
By a 5-4 vote, the court ruled that corporations
can finance independent campaigns directly
from their treasuries. But by 8-1, the court
reaffirmed that financial disclosure laws are
constitutional, even for independent election
campaigns. The new bottom line is that corporations can spend freely on independent election
campaigns, but they have no constitutional right
to do so anonymously.

Litigation: The Battle Inside the Courtroom

Moreover, federal courts have consistently ruled
that, when it comes to court elections, the First
Amendment must be properly weighed against
other constitutional rights.
In Caperton v. Massey, the Supreme Court held
that the First Amendment does not trump
the Constitution’s Due Process Clause, and its
guarantee of a fair, impartial tribunal. In disqualifying a judge from a case involving a major
campaign supporter, the Court made clear that
there is no First Amendment right to the judge of
one’s choosing. Thus, the Constitution provides
robust protections for political speech during a
judicial campaign. But once the voting is over,
the Constitution guarantees all litigants a fair
hearing, even if a particular elected judge must
sometimes step aside. Significantly, although
Citizens United allowed unlimited spending
by corporate treasuries, Justice Anthony M.
Kennedy nonetheless reaffirmed Caperton, saying that a judge may be disqualified when
one litigant’s campaign expenditures have “a
disproportionate influence in placing the judge
on the case.”
In Duke v. Leake, the Fourth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals emphatically rejected a First
Amendment challenge to North Carolina’s judicial public financing system. Saying that the
state had a “vital interest” in protecting courts,
it ruled that participating judicial candidates
could receive additional public funds if an oppo-

nent or independent group exceeds specified
spending limits.
Various interest groups continue trying to use
the First Amendment to trump the guarantee of
due process.
In Wisconsin, months after Caperton v. Massey
was decided, two of the state’s biggest interest
groups, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce
and the Wisconsin Realtors Association, persuaded the state Supreme Court to adopt language they supplied that turned the Caperton
decision on its head. By a 4-3 majority, the court
said campaign contributions and independent
expenditures could never be the sole cause of a
judge’s recusal. The Wisconsin court accepted
the groups’ argument that recusal in such cases
represented “de facto suppression” of the free
speech of campaign spenders.17
The WMC and WRA argued that the only constitutional concerns at stake were First Amendment
values. In doing so, they largely ignored the clear
message of Caperton: where issues of recusal are
concerned, First Amendment claims must be
balanced with due process concerns.
Such efforts will no doubt continue. If the First
Amendment becomes a proxy to use limitless
secret money to tilt the scales of justice, or is
twisted into a right to choose the judge one has
paid to elect, then the Constitution’s guarantee
of a fair trial will be swallowed up.

“The concern for promoting and
protecting the impartiality and
independence of the judiciary is
not a new one; it dates back at
least to our nation’s founding. . . .
The provisions challenged today,
which embody North Carolina’s
effort to protect this vital interest
in an independent judiciary, are
within the limits placed on the
state by the First Amendment.”

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

–Fourth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
opinion in Duke v. Leake, upholding
public financing of state appellate court
elections

65

Chapter 4 Notes
1.	

“Company asks Benjamin to recuse himself
again, this time with poll numbers,” Legal News
Online, March 28, 2008, http://legalnewsline.com/
news/209989-company-asks-benjamin-to-recusehimself-again-this-time-with-poll-numbers.

2.	 Co-signing the Justice at Stake Campaign’s amicus
brief were: American Judicature Society, Appleseed,
Common Cause, Constitutional Accountability
Center, Institute for the Advancement of the
American Legal System, League of Women Voters,
National Ad Hoc Advisory Committee on Judicial
Campaign Conduct, Alabama Appleseed Center
for Law & Justice, Colorado Judicial Institute,
Democracy North Carolina, Fund for Modern
Courts, Illinois Campaign for Political Reform,
Justice for All, League of Women Voters of Michigan,
League of Women Voters of Wisconsin Education
Fund, Massachusetts Appleseed Center for Law &
Justice, Michigan Campaign Finance Network,
Missourians for Fair and Impartial Courts, NC
Center for Voter Education, Ohio Citizen Action,
Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts, Texans for Public
Justice, Washington Appellate Lawyers Association,
Washington Appleseed, Wisconsin Democracy
Campaign, Chicago Appleseed, and Chicago Council
of Lawyers.
3.	 Paul Nyden, “Mining Appeal Moving Along,” West
Virginia Gazzette, May 16, 2008, at http://www.wvgazette.com/News/200805150741.
4.	 Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., Amicus Curiae
brief, Brennan Center for Justice, available at http://
brennan.3cdn.net/7ef37b5cbb848b77e8_b9m6b5zt9.
pdf.
5.	

Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co., Brief of Amici
Curiae, The Conference of Chief Justices, in Support
of Neither Party 4 (U.S. No. 08-22), available at
http://brennan.3cdn.net/d6274e472669a87b58_dqm6ii1z9.pdf

6.	 In-depth information on the case and court arguments are available at Justice at Stake, http://www.
justiceatstake.org/resources/in_depth_issues_guides/
caperton_resource_page/, and the Brennan Center
for Justice, http://www.brennancenter.org/content/
resource/caperton_v_massey/.
7.	 All quotes, including those in dissent, are
taken from the U.S. Supreme Court opinion in
Caperton v. Massey, http://www.supremecourt.gov/
opinions/08pdf/08-22.pdf.
8.	 Tony Mauro, “Coping With Caperton,” Blog of Legal
Times, June 10, 2009, http://legaltimes.typepad.com/

blt/2009/06/coping-with-caperton-a-conversationwith-tom-phillips.html.
9.	 Press Release, Justice at Stake, “Poll: Huge Majority
Wants Firewall Between Judges, Election Backers,”
(Feb. 22, 2009), includes link to polling data.
Release is available at http://www.justiceatstake.org/
newsroom/press_releases.cfm/poll_huge_majority_wants_firewall_between_judges_election_
backers?show=news&newsID=5677.
10.	 Republican Party of Minnesota v. White (2002), opinion available at http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/
getcase.pl?court=us&vol=000&invol=01-521.
11.	 Weaver v. Bonner (2002), opinion available at http://
caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=11th&
navby=docket&no=0015158opn.
12.	 Siefert v. Alexander, order and opinion, available at
http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-7th-circuit/1527183.
html.
13.	 Midwest Democracy Network, Justice at
Stake Campaign, “Guidelines for Judicial
Candidates,” September 2008, http://staging.
justiceatstake.sitevizenterprise.com/media/cms/
JASMWMemorev_50F6EDD22B678.pdf.
14.	 David D. Kirkpatrick, “A Quest to End Spending
Rules for Campaigns, New York Times, Jan. 24,
2010, http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/25/us/
politics/25bopp.html?emc=eta1.
15.	 Justice at Stake Campaign, amicus brief in Citizens
United v. Federal Election Commission, http://www.
justiceatstake.org/media/cms/JAS_CU_Brief_
FA9AE1D6AB94E.pdf.
16.	 In Buckley v. Valeo (1976), the U.S. Supreme Court
specifically considered the First Amendment, but
cited three compelling government interests that justified various campaign finance rules. “Preserving the
integrity of the election process”—combatting corruption and the appearance of corruption—was sufficient reason to justify both campaign contribution
limits and financial disclosure rules. The court said
two additional reasons justified financial disclosure
rules, both for candidates and independent campaigns
urging a candidate’s election or defeat. These were
“informing the public” as to which interests were
supporting a particular candidate; and as a “recordkeeping” aid, to help detect potential violations of
campaign contribution limits.
17.	 Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, Petition to
Wisconsin Supreme Court on Proposed Amendment
to Judicial Code, http://wicourts.gov/supreme/
docs/0910petitionsupport.pdf.

“Judicial elections are not going away [and] Caperton provides
a backstop for the most egregious cases of large campaign
spending, particularly when other measures are off the table
or severely limited.”
66	

The Battle
Inside the
—Richard Hasen, Loyola University professorLitigation:
and expert
in election
lawCourtroom

Chapter 5

Public Takes Note,
Decision-Makers
Begin to Follow
If 2000–2009 was the decade when runaway
spending defined a “New Politics” of judicial
elections, it also was the decade when the
public, media and legal community took note,
and demanded reforms to restore trust in the
courts.
Throughout the decade, state and national polls
have shown an overwhelming concern about the
intersection of campaign money with the courts’
historic and constitutional role as a fair, impartial tribunal that provides “equal justice under
law.” Since 2001, nationwide polls by Justice at
Stake,1 USA Today2 and Zogby International3
have revealed similar numbers: About three
Americans in four believe campaign contributions can tilt the scales of justice, by influencing
courtroom decisions.
Other polls show 79 percent of business executives, and even 46 percent of state judges,
believe campaign cash affects rulings by judges.4
Newspaper articles and editorials have extensively documented the dangers of special interest
money and called for stronger recusal mechanisms, merit selection of judges, and/or public
financing of judicial election campaigns. Most
encouragingly, in the few cases where court
issues went directly to voters, they have voted to
protect impartial courts.
The good news of the past decade is this:
Americans support the Constitution’s vision of
courts free from outside manipulation. They
understand that our nation’s courts should be
accountable to the law, not special interest or
extremist agendas. Instinctively and overwhelmingly, they understand that there should not
even be an appearance that one side can win a
case by subsidizing a judge’s election.

Recent Reform Efforts
While decision-makers have frequently been
slow to respond with concrete reforms, there
were real signs as the decade closed that the
new politics of judicial elections were creating a
growing openness to meaningful reform.
In November 2009, Michigan’s Supreme Court
became the nation’s first court, after the Caperton
decision, to significantly strengthen state recusal
rules. It also became the first high court ever
to say individual justices could be ordered, by a
vote of fellow justices, to step aside from cases
where ethical conflicts had been demonstrated.
Under the rule, all Michigan judges and justices may be asked to step aside if “the judge’s
impartiality might objectively and reasonably be
questioned.” At the Supreme Court level, “If the
challenged justice denies the motion for disqualification, a party may move for the motion to be
decided by the entire Court. The entire Court
shall then decide the motion for disqualification
de novo.” In lower courts, a judge’s refusal to
step aside can be appealed to the chief judge.
In December 2009, Wisconsin, which had been
buffeted by two costly Supreme Court elections, became the third state nationally to adopt
public financing for appellate court elections.
Just three months later in West Virginia, where
the money-soaked 2004 election ultimately led
to Caperton v. Massey, lawmakers in March
2010 enacted a pilot public-financing program
for the state’s 2012 Supreme Court elections.5
Public financing of appellate races has also
been discussed in Illinois, as part of a package
of reforms following the impeachment of Gov.
Rod Blagojevich. Illinois lawmakers also enacted

*

Chapter 5 notes
are on page 76.

What the Public and Business Leaders Think
Do you believe campaign spending
affects court room decisions?

76%

Judges should not rule on cases
involving campaign contributors?

97%
19%

Figure 33.

Sources, from left
to right: Justice at
Stake, 2001 national
poll; Committee
for Economic
Development, 2007
survey of business
leaders; Justice at
Stake, 2008 poll of
Wisconsin voters

5%
3%
No Answer

Disagree

Just a Little or No Influence

Agree

Great Deal of or Some

contribution limits for all elections, including
judicial campaigns.

was urged by Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts
and four present and former governors.7

In Nevada, where the Los Angeles Times6 detailed
judicial fundraising scandals, voters were set to
decide in 2010 whether to choose judges through
merit selection. In merit systems, a nonpartisan
panel submits candidates to the governor, who
selects from that list. Judges then face voters
in periodic retention elections. Former Gov. Al
Quie pushed a similar plan in Minnesota, and
in Pennsylvania a constitutional amendment

Americans are ready for real reform. For
instance, a January 2008 survey of Wisconsin
voters showed strong bipartisan support for
public financing of state Supreme Court elections, with 65 percent favoring such a plan and
only 26 percent opposing it. A December 2007
poll in Missouri showed strong public support
for the existing judicial appointment system. In
February 2009, a series of national polls, includ-

Public financing “makes all the difference.
I’ve run in two elections, one with campaign
finance reform and one without. I’ll take
‘with’—any day, anytime, anywhere.”
—Judge Wanda Bryant, Court of Appeals of North Carolina

68	

The Public Takes Note

Do you favor voluntary public
financing for Supreme Court
candidates?

65%
26%

in two elections, one with campaign finance
reform and one without. I’ll take ‘with’ – any
day, anytime, anywhere.”10 (New Mexico, which
has a hybrid appointment-election system and
only rarely holds contestable elections, adopted
public financing in 2007 but the system has not
yet been used.) Wisconsin’s public-financing
law was signed by Gov. Jim Doyle in December
2009, and in March 2010, West Virginia’s legislature approved a pilot public-financing program
for Supreme Court elections in 2012.
Financial Disclosure Laws

9%

No Answer
No
Yes

ing a Harris Interactive survey for Justice at
Stake, showed that more than eight Americans
in 10 supported rules changes so that judges
would not hear cases involving big-money election supporters.8

The Broader Reform Menu
Here is a summary of efforts to insulate courts
from special-interest pressure:
Public Financing for Appellate
Court Elections

North Carolina adopted public financing in
2002. By any measure, the North Carolina program has been a huge success. Women, minorities and candidates of both parties have been
elected, and in three elections (2004, 2006 and
2008), 31 of 40 eligible candidates participated in
the system.9 Public financing reduces the burden
on judicial candidates to raise money from special interests before the court, and thus lowers
the potential for ethical conflict. Said Wanda
Bryant, Judge on the North Carolina Court of
Appeals: “It makes all the difference. I’ve run
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Financial disclosure laws, important because
they give the public information and perspective
on who is spending money in their elections,
were enacted in a few states after Congress
passed the McCain-Feingold campaign finance
law in 2002. But many legislatures have been
indifferent, and in a few cases, federal courts
have struck down or limited the use of disclosure
laws. A bill passed in Mississippi to improve
disclosure laws was vetoed in 2005. “Indecent
Disclosure,” a 2007 report by the National
Institute on Money in State Politics, noted that
only five states had truly effective, timely laws
for shedding sunlight on independent campaigns

“Millions of dollars spent by special
interests each year to influence
state elections go essentially
unreported to the public.
[Independent expenditures] form
the single-largest loophole in the
laws. . .
implementing
transparency in
state electoral
politics.”
–Indecent Disclosure,
2007 report by the National Institute
on Money in State Politics
69

by interest groups: “Millions of dollars spent by
special interests each year to influence state
elections go essentially unreported to the public.
[Independent expenditures] form the singlelargest loophole in the laws and administrative
procedures implementing transparency in state
electoral politics.”11 One important dimension of
the Citizens United ruling is that it declared, 8-1,
that election disclosure laws are constitutional—
giving states a clear green light that they may
strengthen their laws to shed sunlight on election spending by special-interest groups.
Stronger Recusal Rules for Judges

Stronger recusal rules for judges in cases involving campaign benefactors have enormous potential to reduce conflict, by encouraging judges
not to handle cases involving major campaign
supporters. An American Bar Association model
rule, which proposed toughening recusal rules
for judges, has been largely ignored by state
court systems, in part because of perceived flaws
with the specific proposal. However, Caperton v.
Massey, which involved a West Virginia judge’s
refusal to step aside, highlighted the problem
of jurists serving as the final arbiter in their
own recusal cases. A 2008 Brennan Center for
Justice report, “Fair Courts: Setting Recusal
Standards,” established a menu of 10 possible
reforms, significantly focusing on the need for
independent adjudication of the most serious
disqualification motions. The ABA is exploring
new model recusal rules,12 and according to a
Brennan Center summary, disqualification rules
were being reviewed in 11 states in 2009, by
courts, legislatures, bar associations or appointed
bodies.13
Voter Information/Guides

In 2004, North Carolina became the first, and
to date only, state to mail judicial voter educa-

tion guides to every registered voter. Michigan
and Ohio have worked with civic groups such as
the League of Women Voters to publish online
voters guides for judicial races, while other
states, including Alaska, California, Oregon and
Washington, mail out judicial information as part
of more extensive voter guides. In Washington,
a creative non-government information source
is provided by www.votingforjudges.org, which
includes candidate statements and experience,
as well as reports on their financial backing. But
there remains an overwhelming need for greater
resources. According to a 2004 Justice at Stake
poll, 67 percent of those surveyed said reliable
nonpartisan voters guides would make them
more likely to vote in judicial elections.14
Judicial Performance Evaluations

Well-designed judicial performance evaluations provide objective feedback to judges from
lawyers, staff, witnesses, jurors and others who
come into contact with judges, while quantifying that data to help voters assess a judge’s fitness.
According to the Institute for the Advancement
of the American Legal System, nine states
conduct government-run survey programs and
release data to the public on at least some judges.
Seven others conduct government-run surveys
but show data only to the judges themselves.
Hawaii shows the full data to judges and releases
a summary to the public.15
Appointment/Retention Systems

Judicial appointment/retention systems (also
known as merit selection) gained national popularity in the 1960s and 1970s, and 24 states eventually chose to use nonpartisan commissions
to screen state supreme court nominees. But
the movement stalled in the 1980s.16 Signaling
a potentially significant shift, voters in Greene
County, Missouri, chose in 2008 to replace

“I think judicial elections are really the untold story of Citizens United,
the untold implication. . . . But judicial elections are really a national
scandal that few people really know about.”
—Jeffrey Toobin, writer for The New Yorker

70	

The Public Takes Note

The Rise and Fall of
Judicial Tampering by Ballot Measures

hurts goo
d
people.

For fair courts advocates, one of the biggest stories in
2008 was a non-story. Nationally, no statewide ballot
measures sought to make damaging attacks on the
court system. This stood in welcome contrast to 2006,
when five ballot measures had the potential to expose
courts to special interest and partisan assault.
In the last decade, few proposals caused greater dread
than the 2006 “J.A.I.L. 4 Judges” ballot measure in
South Dakota. The measure, inspired by a disgruntled
populist in California, was a test drive of a truly radical idea: creating a special grand jury that could
indict judges for making “wrong” decisions. Judges
would have been forced to pay their own legal bills
to defend themselves. They also would have been
stripped of their immunity from civil suits.
In the months before the election, a broad bipartisan opposition stepped forward. The business community, which needs stable arbiters to resolve business disputes, joined with
both political parties and civic groups. The measure suffered a devastating loss, 89 to 11
percent, in a conservative heartland state. Perhaps as a consequence, no other states saw
a “J.A.I.L. 4 Judges” initiative in 2008.

Amendment E

lets convicts
sue jurors.
If a lawbreake
r doesn’t like
your
decision, E giv
es them the po
wer
to come after
you. Don’t
make your fam
ily, friends
or yourself vu
lnerable
to a vindictiv
e con.

Vote NO o

n E.

N
Oon E
Ame
Paid for by No

ndment

on E Committee,

PO Box 814,

Pierre, SD 57501
Bob Miller, Treasu .
rer.

Figure 34.

Less extreme, but still significant, ballot measures also were defeated in 2006—in
Colorado, Hawaii and Oregon—that sought to tamper with the courts’ composition. Hawaii
voters rejected a plan to eliminate mandatory retirement for judges, just as a Republican
candidate was poised to claim the governorship and appoint judges to fill vacancies normally created by retirement. Oregon voters rejected a plan to choose appellate judges
by district. A Montana initiative was voided because of fraudulent petition signatures, and
Colorado voters rejected a measure to institute retroactive term limits on appellate judges.
Forces opposing the Colorado measure warned that the measure would force more than
half of all appellate judges into instant retirement, and allow one governor to repack
the court en masse. They reduced their campaign to four words: “Bad Idea, Serious
Consequences.” Voters agreed, and in 2008, the measure’s sponsor, a former state senator, said he couldn’t get enough money to attempt a new petition drive.

elections for local judges with a nonpartisan
judicial nominating commission, while voters
in Johnson County, Kansas, soundly rejected
efforts to get rid of their appointment system for
local judges. In 2009, Nevada lawmakers put a
constitutional amendment before voters, to be
decided in November 2010, on whether to use an
appointment/retention system for state Supreme
Court justices, and in 2010, Minnesota lawmakers were considering a proposed amendment to
use retention elections for sitting justices, instead
of nonpartisan competitive elections. In Ohio,
the late Chief Justice Thomas Moyer (a Justice at
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Stake board member) led public efforts to adopt
merit selection for the Supreme Court until his
death in April 2010, while Maryland, which uses
retention elections for appellate courts, considered an amendment to use the same system for
Circuit Court judges. And in March 2010, West
Virginia established a judicial nominating commission to screen and submit qualified nominees
to the governor when midterm judicial vacancies occurred. Fourteen states now use similar
commissions to help fill at least some midterm
vacancies.

71

The Media Take Note
On March 3, 2009, the same morning that the U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments in
Caperton v. Massey, the New York Times, USA Today and the Washington Post all ran editorials
decrying special-interest money in court elections. This unprecedented one-day display capped
a decade of growing national media attention to runaway special-interest spending. Some highlights:
The West Virginia case, while extreme, points to an alarming trend. It comes
at a time when judicial neutrality — and the appearance of neutrality — basic
to due process are under a growing threat from big-money state judicial
campaigns and the special-interest contributions that fuel them.
—New York Times editorial, March 3, 2009
Judicial races, once staid, low-budget affairs, have in the past decade
turned into mudslinging, multimillion-dollar brawls that have shaken public
confidence in justice. All over the nation, Republicans and business interests
often vie against Democrats, trial lawyers and labor unions to shop for judges
who will vote their way.
—USA Today editorial, March 3, 2009
States should consider barring judges from considering cases involving
litigants or lawyers who were directly or indirectly responsible for campaign
contributions beyond a certain limit. More fundamental, states should
consider abolishing judicial elections in favor of an appointment system that
distances jurists from politics and fundraising.
—Washington Post editorial, March 3, 2009
In 2006, a Los Angeles Times investigation showed that even Nevada
judges running unopposed collected hundreds of thousands of dollars
in contributions from litigants. The report noted that donations were
“frequently” dated “within days of when a judge took action in the
contributor’s case.”
In 2006, Adam Liptak and Janet Roberts of the New York Times published
a groundbreaking study of Ohio Supreme Court decisions. The study
showed that over a twelve-year period, Ohio justices voted in favor of their
contributors more than 70% of the time, with one justice, Terrence O’Donnell,
voting with his contributors 91% of the time.
The issue is whether Supreme Court justices will be perceived as just your
common ordinary politician, thought to be willing to dance with the folks
whose big money brought them to the ball.
—Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel editorial
Since 2000, judicial elections in Mississippi have degenerated into spending
contests between the state’s business/medical community and trial lawyers—
with hefty national special interest groups joining in.
—Jackson Clarion-Ledger editorial
How would you like to go into an appeals court if your opponent in the case
spent $3 million to help elect one of the judges?
—Boston Globe editorial

72	

The Public Takes Note

Judicial Appointments:
The Emerging Battlefront

Figure 35. Ad for
Greene County
Nonpartisan Court
Plan

One of the hottest battles in judicial politics
has pivoted on one question: should judges be
elected at all?
Some leading papers, scholars and judicial
luminaries, such as former Justice Sandra Day
O’Connor, advocate merit selection, a system in
which nonpartisan commissions submit slates
of judicial candidates, to the governor, for
final appointment. But a passionate and wellconnected opposition has worked with unprecedented force to weaken or dismantle merit
selection systems, and bring more states into the
free‑spending world of judicial elections.
In 2007 and 2008, this fight played out at the
state level, in Missouri and Tennessee, and at
the county level, in elections in Missouri and
Kansas.
Lining up to eliminate or modify judicial
appointment systems—commonly known as
merit selection—were a number of national
heavyweights. They included the Wall Street
Journal’s editorial page;17 the Federalist Society
(with polls in Missouri and Tennessee, and prominently published academic papers in Kansas and
Tennessee); and the American Justice Partnership,
an offshoot of the National Association of
Manufacturers. CRC Communications, which

ran the 2004 “swift boat” campaign, helped
handle anti-merit publicity in Missouri and
Tennessee.18 In Kansas, a conservative religious
group called Kansas Judicial Review (with a
program called “Clear the Bench”) led antimerit efforts.19
For all the fury, the effort so far has borne
limited fruit.
In April 2008, Missouri legislators beat back a
ferocious campaign to tamper with the state’s
commission nomination system, which dates
to 1940 and is the nation’s oldest. Defenders
of the plan, including the Missouri State Bar,
said the changes would expose courts to greater
partisan politics. An encore effort also failed in
2008, when the Senate refused to vote on a proposed ballot measure.

Figure 36. Ad against
Greene County
Nonpartisan Court
Plan featuring John
Ashcroft, former
Missouri senator and
U.S. attorney general
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

73

U.S. Chamber of Commerce
and Merit Selection

I

n

Throughout the decade, a widely publicized U.S. Chamber of
Commerce survey showed that states using the nonpartisan merit
selection process to appoint judges ranked among the most
trusted by America’s business leaders. The survey’s lowest-ranking
states were dominated by those with runaway judicial election
spending.
Highest-Ranking Litigation Climates
1. Delaware (Judges Appointed/Merit Selection)
2. North Dakota (Nonpartisan Elections)
3. Nebraska (Judges Appointed/Merit Selection)
4. Indiana (Judges Appointed/Merit Selection)
5. Iowa (Judges Appointed/Merit Selection)
Lowest-Ranking Litigation Climates
46. California (Judges Appointed)
47. Alabama (Partisan Elections)
48. Mississippi (Nonpartisan Elections)
49. Louisiana (Partisan Elections)
50. West Virginia (Partisan Elections)
In a 2009 report indicating further consideration of merit selection, the Chamber’s
Institute for Legal Reform outlined best
practices for merit selection of judges.

“Quality of justice in
our state courts is
of critical importance to
the entire business community.”
–Promoting “Merit” in Merit Selection, 2009 report by U.S.
Chamber of Commerce’s Institute for Legal Reform

Tennessee, a long-standing judicial appointment
system was scheduled to expire in 2009—coincidentally, just as the U.S. Supreme Court
was deliberating on Caperton v. Massey. Faced
with a worst-case scenario in neighboring West
74	

Virginia, Tennessee lawmakers shied away from
state Supreme Court elections, instead voting to
preserve a modified appointment system.
“The Tennessee Plan may need some tweaking,
but it’s better than state-wide races that force
appellate judges to raise huge amounts of cash
from sources who often contribute for selfish
reasons,” said a Memphis Commercial Appeal
editorial. The paper added that chances of a
Caperton scenario in Tennessee “might be slim,
but it’s a chance we shouldn’t have to take at
all.”20
But anti-merit efforts were complicated by a key
factor over the 2000–09 decade. The public,
while showing an instinctive desire to elect
officials, generally failed to buy the vitriolic
language peddled by the harshest enemies of
judicial appointments.
Whereas the Wall Street Journal has likened
appointment systems to a “judicial coup” by trial
lawyers, and the American Justice Partnership
regularly calls appointment panels “star chambers,” the appointment/retention systems have
helped keep money out of judicial selection for decades—and they have earned
broad public confidence.
A 2007 poll by Justice at Stake showed that
71 percent of Missouri voters trusted the
state’s system of appointing appellate judges.21
While a state Federalist Society pollster later
claimed a “full-throated cry” for change,22 the
Justice at Stake poll found that only 2 percent of
Missouri voters considered changing the judicial
selection system a top priority.

The Voters Weigh In
The public confirmed its wariness of specialinterest influence in 2008 at the ballot box.
Voters in Greene County, Missouri, were asked
to get rid of competitive elections for local trial
judges, instead using a system of appointments
and periodic retention elections, while voters
in Johnson County, Kansas, were asked to do
the opposite, and get rid of their appointment
system for local judges.
The elections forced voters to weigh two welldocumented competing values. Polls—including
The Public Takes Note

surveys by such disparate groups as the American
Bar Association, American Judicature Society
and American Justice Partnership—show three
Americans in four initially favor electing judges
over appointing them, when asked that question
in a vacuum. But opinion surveys also show a
second, countervailing concern: three Americans
in four believe special-interest spending makes
courtrooms less fair and impartial.
Defenders of the appointment system in Johnson
County invoked public concerns about campaign cash in one slogan, “Keep Politic$ Out of
Our Courts.” Opponents of merit selection in
Greene County persuaded John Ashcroft, a local
hero who became Missouri senator, and U.S.
attorney general, to take the other side, airing
a TV ad urging the public not to surrender its
right to vote in judicial races.
Attempting to convert these local measures into
a national ideological debate, the Wall Street
Journal cited Johnson and Greene counties
in separate editorials—extraordinary attention
for county-level ballot measures23—while the
national Federalist Society mailed educational
letters to voters in Greene County, an equally unusual intervention in a local race. The
Ashcroft ad was funded by $315,000 from a
statewide group, whose ultimate funding source
remains a mystery.24
In the end, voters backed merit selection in both
jurisdictions. They put their trust in local leaders, including the local chambers of commerce,
who said the appointment systems produce
qualified judges and stable courts. The supporting role of the local business community was
intriguing, and may have a significant impact as
states such as Nevada and Minnesota consider
whether to move away from competitive elections for state Supreme Court judges.

Debate in the
Business Sector
While business groups have enjoyed considerable success in such elections during the “New
Politics” era, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s
own national rankings offer a different take
on the election/appointment debate. According
to the Chamber’s annual survey of corporate
counsel, four of the five lowest-ranking states,
from a business perspective, have contested
judicial elections marked by runaway spending.
Four of the five states with the best litigation
climates, according to the survey, have appointment systems—using the commission nominating system known as merit selection.25

More information
@justiceatstake.org

In October 2009, the Chamber’s Institute for
Legal Reform sent a significant signal that
the nation’s top business organization may be
rethinking the potential benefits of judicial
appointment systems. In a groundbreaking
report, “Promoting ‘Merit’ in Merit Selection,”26
the Institute presented a list of best practices
for states that fill judicial vacancies through
appointment rather than election. Without
endorsing appointment systems over elections,
the Chamber report praised Arizona’s appointment system as a model that promotes public
trust.
Noting that the “quality of justice in our state
courts is of critical importance to the entire
business community,” the report said appointment systems serve the public best when they
are “characterized by transparency, diverse participation in the Commission, and opportunities
for the public at large to provide input into the
process.”

“Messy judicial campaigns are not inevitable in Missouri
if citizens are willing to. . . stand up for independent
courts and say no to political extremism and
opportunists.”
—St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

75

Reprinted From

From New York Ti

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All rights reserv

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by the Copyright La

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Chapter 5 Notes
1.	

Press Release, National Surveys of American Voters
and State Judges, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner
Research and American Viewpoint for Justice at Stake
(Feb. 14, 2002), available at http://www.justiceatstake.
org/media/cms/PollingsummaryFINAL_9EDA3EB3
BEA78.pdf.

2.	 Joan Biskupic, “Supreme Court case with the feel of
a best seller,” USA Today, Feb. 16, 2009 available at
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/200902-16-grisham-court_N.htm. According to the USA

76	

Today/Gallup poll, 89 percent felt contributions
potentially affecting courtroom decisions was a problem, and 52 percent consider it a “major” problem.
The article added: “More than 90% of the 1,027 adults
surveyed said judges should be removed from a case if
it involves an individual or group that contributed to
the judge’s election campaign.”
3.	 Press Release, Justice at Stake, March 2004 Survey
Highlights, Zogby International for Justice at Stake
(March 2004) available at http://www.justiceatstake.
org/media/cms/ZogbyPollFactSheet_54663DAB970
C6.pdf

The Public Takes Note

4.	 Both polls, the 2007 Committee for Economic
Development Survey of Business Executives and the
2001 National Bipartisan Survey of Almost 2,500
Judges, are available at http://www.justiceatstake.org/
resources/justice_at_stake_polls.cfm.
5.	

A Justice at Stake poll showed support for public
financing spiked significantly when West Virginia
voters were reminded of the money-soaked 2004 state
high court election.

6.	 Michael J. Goodman and William C. Rempel, “Juice
vs. Justice: In Las Vegas, They’re Playing With a
Stacked Judicial Deck” Los Angeles Times, June 8,
2006, http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jun/08/nation/
na-vegas8.
7.	 A 2009–10 national summary of judicial reform
efforts is available at the Brennan Center for Justice,
http://www.brennancenter.org/content/resource/
state_judicial_reform_efforts_2009/.
8.	 Information on all three surveys is available at Justice
at Stake’s polling page, http://www.justiceatstake.org/
resources/justice_at_stake_polls.cfm.
9.	 2004 and 2006 data at http://www.ncjudges.org/jcra/
pcf.html, 2008 data from Nov. 5, 2008, Justice at
Stake press release, “2008 Supreme Court Elections:
More Money, More Nastiness,” www.justiceatstake.
org.
10.	 “New Politics of Judicial Elections, 2006,” Brennan
Center for Justice, National Institute on Money in
State Politics, Justice at Stake Campaign, http://www.
justiceatstake.org/resources/the_new_politics_of_judicial_elections.cfm.
11.	 Linda King, “Indecent Disclosure,” National
Institute on Money in State Politics report, August
2007, http://www.followthemoney.org/press/
Reports/200708011.pdf.
12.	 James Sample, David Pozen, and Michael Young,
“Fair Courts: Setting Recusal Standards,” (New
York: Brennan Center for Justice, 2008), available
at http://www.brennancenter.org/content/resource/
fair_courts_setting_recusal_standards/. The ABA’s
ongoing work on its Judicial Disqualification Project
can be found at the ABA Standing Committee on
Judicial Independence, http://www.abanet.org/judind/
home.html.
13.	 See also, James Sample, “Court Reform Enters the
Post-Caperton Era,” Drake Law Review (publication
scheduled in 2010).
14.	 Justice at Stake Campaign, press release, “Americans
Speak Out on Judicial Elections,” March 2004, http://
www.justiceatstake.org/media/cms/ZogbyPollFactShe
et_54663DAB970C6.pdf.

17.	 A number of Wall Street Journal editorials targeting
merit selection can be found at www.gavelgrab.org.
One example is the Aug. 14, 2008, editorial, “The
ABA Plots a Judicial Coup,” http://online.wsj.com/
article/SB121867190633138889.html?mod=articleoutset-box.
18.	 See separate articles in Gavel Grab blog focusing
on CRC/Federalist Society in Missouri (http://
www.gavelgrab.org/?p=330) and Tennessee (http://
www.gavelgrab.org/?p=192). Also see Scott Lauck,
“Federalist Society Finds Missouri Voters Want More
Say Over Judges,” Missouri Lawyers Weekly, March
12, 2007, http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/
summary_0286-29956442_ITM
19.	 Details of the “Clear the Bench” initiative may be
found at http://www.kansasjudicialreview.org/.
20.	 Memphis Commercial Appeal editorial, “Let’s Retain
Tennessee Plan,” March 15, 2009, http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2009/mar/15/lets-retain-thetenn-plan/.
21.	 Justice at Stake poll, December 2007, http://www.
justiceatstake.org/media/cms/MissouriMemoAndOver
allResults_15E5E80BAC758.pdf.
22.	 See Note 18, Missouri Lawyers Weekly article.
23.	 The Wall Street Journal explicitly cited Johnson
County in an Aug. 14, 2008, editorial, as part of a
broader attack on judicial appointment systems (“The
ABA Plots a Judicial Coup,“ http://online.wsj.com/
article/SB121867190633138889.html?mod=articleoutset-box). Greene County, the only Missouri jurisdiction voting on merit selection in 2008, was alluded
to in an Oct. 30 Wall Street Journal editorial, which
said: “In Missouri, where trial court judges are still
elected, a referendum would eliminate elections for
judges and give the state bar association a larger role
in selecting them.” The editorial, “State Courts in the
Balance,” is available at http://online.wsj.com/article/
SB122533125197182865.html.
24.	 “Local Merit Election Explodes Into National
Campaign,” Gavel Grab blog, http://www.gavelgrab.
org/?p=671.
25.	 “Lawsuit Climate 2010,” Institute for Legal Reform,
www.instituteforlegalreform.com/lawsuit-climate.
html#2010.
26.	 Institute for Legal Reform, “Promoting ‘Merit’ in
Merit Selection,” October 2009 report, http://www.
instituteforlegalreform.com/images/stories/documents/
pdf/research/meritselectionbooklet.pdf. See also, Oct.
28, 2009, commentary by Bert Brandenburg, “Big
Business Group Lays Out Preferred Merit Model,” in
Gavel Grab blog, http://www.gavelgrab.org/?p=4605.

15.	 Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal
System, Judicial Performance Evaluation page, http://
www.du.edu/legalinstitute/jpe.html.
16.	 A comprehensive survey of judicial selection methods
in the states is available at the American Judicature
Society, http://www.judicialselection.us/judicial_selection_materials/index.cfm. Also see Justice at Stake’s
“Your State” national map, http://www.justiceatstake.
org/state/index.cfm.
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

77

Appendix 1

State Profiles, 2000–2009

Alabama
Candidate
Fundraising
$40,964,590
National Ranking
1
Total TV
$15,690,777
National Ranking
2

78	

One of the first states to experience the new politics of judicial elections, Alabama also
has been the most expensive. Of the $40.9 million raised by Alabama Supreme Court
candidates from 2000 through 2009, $22 million, or 53.7 percent, came from just 20
groups. Eight of the 10 biggest spenders were business or conservative groups, led by the
Business Council of Alabama (No. 2, at $4,633,534) and the Alabama Civil Justice
Reform Committee (No. 3, at $2,699,568), which was the leading funder of 2008 winner Greg Shaw. The other two, the Alabama Democratic Party (No. 1, at $ 5,460,117) and Franklin
PAC (No. 8, at $765,250), were heavily underwritten by plaintiffs’ lawyers.
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $5.4
million, ranking third nationally.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Alabama Democratic Party

$5,460,117

$0

$5,460,117

Business Council of Alabama

$4,633,534

$0

$4,633,534

Alabama Civil Justice Reform
Committee

$2,474,405

$224,663

$2,699,568

American Taxpayers Alliance

$0

$1,337,244

$1,337,244

Lawsuit Reform PAC of Alabama

$1,321,250

$0

$1,321,250

Appendix 1: State Profiles

Georgia
Because of tough, comprehensive rules on candidate contributions, and because
three election cycles produced little or no opposition to incumbents, Georgia
ranked only 14th in candidate fundraising among the 22 states that held competitive Supreme Court elections during 2000–09. But in 2006, Georgia’s high court
election became one of the nation’s noisiest and costliest when the Michigan-based
American Justice Partnership poured $1.3 million into an independent ad campaign, and the state GOP spent an additional $550,000 on its own TV ads. The effort failed to unseat
Justice Carol Hunstein, who relied overwhelmingly on lawyers to raise nearly $1.4 million.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Safety and Prosperity Coalition

$0

$1,747,803

$1,747,803

Georgia Republican Party

$0

$550,003

$550,003

Georgia Democratic Party

$0

$191,456

$191,456

Thomas W. Malone

$27,400

$0

$27,400

Troutman Sanders LLP

$26,889

$0

$26,889

Candidate
Fundraising
$3,773,428
National Ranking
14
Total TV
$3,128,572
National Ranking
8

Illinois
The 2004 Lloyd Karmeier-Gordon Maag race was the most expensive two-candidate
judicial election in American history, with $9.3 million raised by the two campaigns.
Top spenders over the decade include the Illinois Democratic Party (spending
$3,765,920 in contributions and in-kind media buys); the Illinois Republican Party,
($1,981,714 in contributions and TV ads); the Justice for All PAC (spending $1,221,367)
and the Illinois Civil Justice League (spending $1,272,083 in contributions and ads).
Most, but not all, of that money was spent in the 2004 race, and was heavily underwritten by plaintiffs’ lawyers or Chamber of Commerce and insurance groups. In 2002, the American
Taxpayers Alliance, a group that has received U.S. Chamber funding, spent an estimated $250,000
on TV ads to help elect Republican Rita Garman to the Supreme Court. The 2008 election was a
relatively tame footnote to a tumultuous decade: Justice Ann Burke raised $1.8 million in advance of
the campaign, which helped drive away any potential opposition, and then later gave back $760,000
after no challengers emerged.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Illinois Democratic Party

$3,765,920

$0

$3,765,920

Illinois Republican Party

$1,981,714

$0

$1,981,714

Illinois Civil Justice League

$1,272,083

$0

$1,272,083

Justice for All PAC

$1,221,367

$0

$1,221,367

Illinois Chamber of Commerce

$276,838

$0

$276,838

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Candidate
Fundraising
$20,655,924
National Ranking
4
Total TV
$7,141,130
National Ranking
6

79

Louisiana
Candidate
Fundraising
$8,950,146
National Ranking
9
Total TV
$1,250,731
National Ranking
13

Louisiana set a TV spending record in 2008, as incumbent Catherine D. “Kitty”
Kimball and newcomer Greg G. Guidry were elected. Despite fairly tight contribution limits, state Supreme Court candidates raised $8.9 million in 2000–09,
ranking ninth nationally. The Louisiana Association of Business & Industry was
a top contributor to the four most recently elected justices, including Guidry and
Kimball. In 2009, Marcus Clark defeated Jimmy Faircloth in a nasty $1.2 million race.
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $3.9
million, ranking sixth nationally.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Louisiana Conservative Action Network

$0

$251,227

$251,227

Louisiana Democratic Party

$109,416

$0

$109,416

Louisiana Association of Business &
Industry

$76,688

$0

$76,688

Alliance for Justice

$0

$40,192

$40,192

Adams & Reese

$36,000

$0

$36,000

Michigan
Candidate
Fundraising
$12,878,776
National Ranking
6
Total TV
$10,982,950
National Ranking
3

For much of the decade, four conservative Supreme Court justices dominated
Michigan’s Supreme Court. Their opponents, who assailed the justices as an antiplaintiff “Gang of Four,” helped defeat Chief Justice Cliff Taylor in 2008. The
four justices’ top supporters from 2000–09 included the Michigan Chamber
of Commerce and the Michigan Republican Party. Top super spenders on the
other side included the Michigan Democratic Party; the Michigan Trial Lawyers Association;
and Citizens for Judicial Reform (CFJR), a group wholly funded by plaintiffs’ lawyer Geoffrey
Fieger and his law firm. The state Democrats ran more than $1.1 million ads for 2008 winner Diane
Hathaway, almost exactly offsetting the $1.2 million that the Michigan Chamber and GOP combined
to spend on TV ads for Justice Taylor. In addition, the state parties and other PACS reported an
additional $1 million in non-TV spending in 2008.
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising, independent TV ads, and $1 million in non-TV independent expenditures registered with state): $5.9 million.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures* Total

Michigan Chamber of Commerce

$164,140

$2,825,255

$2,989,395

Michigan Democratic Party

$219,142

$2,467,121

$2,686,263

Michigan Republican Party

$217,233

$2,420,328

$2,637,561

Citizens for Judicial Reform

$0

$372,094

$372,094

Ann Arbor PAC

$102,000

$208,000

$310,000

*Includes non-TV independent expenditures listed on state campaign records
80	

Appendix 1: State Profiles

Mississippi
Mississippi was targeted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in 2000 and 2002. In a
pivotal 2002 election, Justice Chuck McRae was ousted after expensive TV campaigns
by Mississippians for Economic Progress and by the Law Enforcement Alliance of
America. Forbes magazine, in 2003, said MFEP received $1 million from the Chamber and
that LEAA spent $500,000. LEAA also spent $660,000 to help oust Justice Oliver Diaz, Jr.
in 2008. On the flip side, Chief Justice Jim Smith was defeated in 2008 by Jim Kitchens, a candidate
backed by the plaintiffs’ bar.
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $3.8
million, ranking seventh nationally.
Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

U.S. Chamber/Mississippians for
Economic Progress*

$0

$2,067,797

$2,067,797

Improve Mississippi PAC (IMPAC)

$0

$1,305,910

$1,305,910

Law Enforcement Alliance of America

$0

$835,255

$835,255

Stop Lawsuit Abuse in Mississippi

$0

$132,259

$132,259

Mississippi Manufacturers Association

$62,100

$0

$62,100

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Fundraising
$10,837,071
National Ranking
7
Total TV
$2,412,915
National
Ranking*
11

*Based on estimates from 2003 Forbes magazine article.

Nevada
With no particularly noteworthy election, Nevada was the nation’s eighth most expensive state for Supreme Court elections in 2000–2009. The $3,135,214 spent in the 2008
Supreme Court race narrowly edged the state’s previous record, set in 2004. But unlike
most states, Nevada’s impetus for reform came from local courts. A 2006 Los Angeles
Times investigation 1 revealed that even judges running unopposed collected hundreds
of thousands of dollars from litigants. Contributions were “frequently” dated “within days of when a
judge took action in the contributor’s case,” the report noted. Lawyers said that challenging the system
was the “kiss of death” and likened the contributions to a “shakedown” by judges. A state commission
recommended a more transparent, timely disciplinary process, and an end to competitive judicial
elections. In November 2010, voters will decide whether to replace competitive elections with a merit
selection appointment system.

Candidate
Fundraising
$9,848,192
National Ranking
8
Total TV
$2,894,675
National Ranking
9

Total Supreme court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $3.1
mil¬lion, ranking ninth nationally.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

MGM Mirage

$156,000

$0

$156,000

Boyd Gaming

$90,000

$0

$90,000

Station Casinos

$76,534

$0

$76,534

Coast Hotels & Casinos

$71,000

$0

$71,000

Mainor Eglet Cottle

$70,000

$0

$70,000

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

81

North Carolina
In 2002, two years after North Carolina saw its first multi-million-dollar
Supreme Court election, state leaders established public financing for appellate court elections. The program has enjoyed broad support from voters and
judicial candidates: 11 of 12 eligible candidates took public funding in 2008.

Candidate
Fundraising
$5,044,857
National Ranking
13
Total TV
$1,564,165
National Ranking
12

What it hasn’t done is stifle the finances needed for robust campaigning. In 2006, when five of eight
Supreme Court candidates accepted public funding, total fundraising was $2.7 million—more than
the $2,057,360 raised in 2000. But the public money comes from income-tax check-offs and lawyer
fees, as opposed to private funding by those with court business. A 2005 poll showed that 74 percent
of state voters wanted to continue public financing for appellate judges.2

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Public funding from state

$2,517,197

$0

$2,517,197

Fair Judges

$0

$272,715

$272,715

North Carolina Democratic Party

$196,359

$0

$196,359

North Carolina Academy of Trial
Lawyers

$20,000

$0

$20,000

North Carolina Republican Party

$16,000

$0

$16,000

Ohio
Candidate
Fundraising
$21,212,389
National Ranking
3
Total TV
$21,364,846
National Ranking
1

Few states have more clearly demonstrated how the nationwide tort wars—led by the
state and national chambers of commerce on one side, and unions and plaintiffs’ lawyers
on the other—can be a driving force in state court elections.
According to TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG estimates, the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce and two state affiliates, Citizens for a Strong Ohio (CSO) and Partnership for Ohio’s
Future, spent $4.2 million on independent TV ads. In 2005, litigation revealed that spending in 2000
by Citizens for a Strong Ohio was higher than previous public estimates. According to court records,
CSO spent $4.4 million in its 2000 campaign alone.3 Funding for Democratic candidates, who were supported by the state party and a lawyer-funded group called Citizens for an Independent Court, ebbed
dramatically after Chamber-backed candidates scored court-changing victories in 2002 and 2004.
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $3.1
million, ranking 10th nationally.
Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

U.S. Chamber of Commerce/Ohio
Affiliates

$49,000

$7,560,168

$7,609,168

Citizens for an Independent Court

$0

$1,543,478

$1,543,478

Ohio Democratic Party

$571,530

$718,349

$1,289,879

Ohio Republican Party

$1,131,131

$52,303

$1,183,434

Ohio Hospital Association

$50,250

$941,910

$992,160

Top Spenders, 2000–09

82	

Appendix 1: State Profiles

Pennsylvania
With no spending limits and a strong trial lawyers’ bar, Pennsylvania has been
ripe for a decade-long battle between competing special interests. It also was the
scene of a rare high-cost retention battle, when one of two justices was defeated
in 2005, amid a public furor over a salary increase for state judges.
The leading players have been the Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association and the Pennsylvania
Republican Party. Citing rising election costs, the legal reform group Pennsylvanians for Modern
Courts (PMC) has urged merit selection for state appellate judges, in which governors choose from
candidates identified by nonpartisan commissions. The plan, endorsed by Gov. Edward Rendell and
three former governors, has broad bipartisan support, according to a 2010 PMC poll.
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads):
$10.3 million, ranking first nationally.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Pennsylvania Republican Party

$2,274,534

$387,300

$2,661,834

Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association

$ 2,398,300

$0

$2,398,300

Center for Individual Freedom

$0

$858,611

$858,611

Pennsylvania Democratic Party

$291,516

$366,400

$657,916

International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers/Affiliated Locals

$628,770

$0

$628,770

Texas
Texas was one of the nation’s earliest states to witness the new big-money politics
of judicial elections. But a coterie of corporate defense firms, using rules that allow
law firms to contribute more than individuals, were prime backers of the state’s allRepublican Supreme Court. Their contributions were dwarfed in one year by the state
Democratic Party, which in 2008 spent an estimated $904,000 on TV ads for three
candidates who all lost by narrow margins. Conservative critics accused plaintiffs’ lawyers of covertly
financing the ads—a charge supported by groups as diverse as Texans for Lawsuit Reform and Texans
for Public Justice.4 Texas’s unusually strict ban on corporate election spending was invalidated by
Citizens United, exposing the state to a potential increase in special-interest campaign money.

Candidate
Fundraising
$21,319,171
National Ranking
2
Total TV
$10,547,109
National Ranking
4

Candidate
Fundraising
$19,197,826
National Ranking
5
Total TV
$2,533,538
National Ranking
10

Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $5.2
million, ranking fourth nationally.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Texas Democratic Party

$36,000

$904,978

$940,978

Vinson & Elkins

$467,768

$0

$467,768

Texans for Lawsuit Reform

$284,045

$0

$284,045

Haynes & Boone

$248,464

$0

$248,464

Fulbright & Jaworski

$240,848

$0

$240,848

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

83

Washington
In 2006, every Supreme Court TV ad was paid for by groups not affiliated
with the campaigns. The election culminated a crescendo in which specialinterest spending rose in three straight election cycles.

Candidate
Fundraising
$5,294,492
National Ranking
12
Total TV
$1,158,431
National Ranking
14

The most persistent players were the Building Industry Association of
Washington and the Washington Affordable Housing Council. After electing two candidates
in 2004, the groups failed to unseat Chief Justice Gerry Alexander in 2006. Pushing back, unions,
environmentalists and plaintiffs’ lawyers funded Citizens to Uphold the Constitution, which spent
an estimated $228,000 on TV ads supporting Alexander. In 2008, incumbents Mary Fairhurst and
Charles W. Johnson won modestly financed primaries and had no opposition in the November election. Recently appointed incumbent Justice Debra Stephens ran unopposed.
Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Building Industry Association of
Washington

$219,573

$464,369

$683,942

Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse

$0

$362,030

$362,030

Citizens to Uphold the Constitution

$0

$228,749

$228,749

Wash. Affordable Housing Council

$157,200

$0

$157,200

Cruise Specialists Inc.

$102,000

$0

$102,000

Top Spenders, 2000–09

West Virginia
Candidate
Fundraising
$7,384,664
National Ranking
10
Total TV
$3,403,981
National Ranking
7

West Virginia suffered a series of controversies, mostly involving one man: Don
Blankenship. The CEO of Massey Coal Co. bankrolled a group called And for the
Sake of the Kids to help elect Justice Brent D. Benjamin, while appealing a $50 million
verdict against his company. Then-Justice Larry Starcher warned that Blankenship had
created “a cancer in the affairs of this Court.” Blankenship’s campaign led to a landmark U.S. Supreme
Court case (Caperton v. Massey). In 2008, Chief Justice Elliott Maynard, who was photographed
vacationing on the Riviera with Blankenship, was ousted by voters. In March 2010, the legislature
approved a trial test of public financing for the 2012 Supreme Court elections. It also established an
eight-member judicial nominating commission, to screen and recommend appointees to the Governor
whenever midterm vacancies occur on the bench.5
Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads): $3.7
million, ranking eighth nationally.

84	

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Don Blankenship

$3,000

$2,978,207

$2,981,207

Consumer Attorneys of West Virginia

$0

$1,899,200

$1,899,200

West Virginia Chamber of Commerce

$8,500

$1,166,427

$1,174,927

Doctors for Justice

$0

$745,000

$745,000

West Virginia Coal Association

$8,500

$230,000

$238,500

Appendix 1: State Profiles

Wisconsin
With the 2007 race between Annette Ziegler and Linda Clifford, and the 2008
race between Justice Louis Butler and challenger Michael Gableman, Wisconsin
turned overnight into one of the costliest, nastiest battleground states in the nation.
Though their TV ads largely focused on criminal justice, the biggest spenders
were squarely on opposing sides of the tort/product liabilities debate. Technically
nonpartisan, both elections were won by candidates backed by the Republican establishment against
Democratic Party-supported opponents. Backing the winners were Wisconsin Manufacturers &
Commerce; Club for Growth; and the Coalition for American Families. The Greater Wisconsin
Committee, backed by organized labor and progressive groups, spent heavily for the two losing
candidates. Spending and vitriol both were lower in 2009, as Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson easily defeated challenger Randy Koschnick, both in fund-raising and at the polls. In response to the
turmoil, the state enacted public financing of Supreme Court elections in December 2009.

Candidate
Fundraising
$6,691,852
National Ranking
11
Total TV
$7,332,914
National Ranking
5

Total Supreme Court spending in 2007–08 (candidate fundraising and independent TV ads):
$8.5 million, ranking second nationally.

Top Spenders, 2000–09

Candidate
Contributions

Independent
Expenditures

Total

Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce

$9,600

$2,012,748

$2,022,348

Greater Wisconsin Committee

$0

$1,736,535

$1,736,535

Club for Growth

$0

$611,261

$611,261

Coalition for America's Families

$0

$398,078

$398,078

Wisconsin Education Association

$0

$48,321

$48,321

Appendix 1 Notes
1.	

Michael J. Goodman and William C. Rempel, “Juice vs. Justice: In Las Vegas, They’re Playing With a Stacked Judicial
Deck” Los Angeles Times, June 8, 2006, http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jun/08/nation/na-vegas8.

2.	 Press release, North Carolina Center for Voter Education, June 28, 2005, available at http://www.ncjudges.org/media/
news_releases/7_28_05.html.
3.	 Public Citizen report, available at http://www.citizen.org/congress/special_intr/articles.cfm?ID=15877.
4.	 Texans for Public Justice report on 2008 campaign spending is at http://info.tpj.org/reports/txpac08/chapter2.html.
Texans for Lawsuit Reform report is at http://www.tlrpac.com/news-08-1121.php.
5.	

Additional information and articles are available at http://www.gavelgrab.org/?p=5169.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

85

Appendix 2

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Supreme Court TV
Advertisements, 2008

Alabama
Paseur Amazing
Grace 60

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

Paseur Choice Is
Clear

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

Paseur Amazing
Grace Rev 60

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

Paseur Forget
Politics

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

Paseur Tough
Smart

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

Paseur Not Me

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

•

Paseur Amazing
Grace

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

Paseur Only
Candidate

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

Paseur Bank
Account

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

Paseur Sunday
Newspaper
Reported

Candidate

Paseur, D Bell

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

Shaw Most Sons
60

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

•

700

$364,923

810

$211,560

337

$205,765

923

$203,452

699

$193,815

781

$189,440

•

582

$140,370

•

720

$126,175

•

364

$82,559

•

91

$23,120

430

$280,685

•

•

•

•

•

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Alabama, continued
Shaw Sam Shaw

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Shaw Broke Her
Pledge

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Contrast

•

406

$138,848

Shaw Amazing
Nor Graceful

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Contrast

•

448

$122,202

Shaw Newspapers
Recommend

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Contrast

•

326

$95,440

Shaw Just Plain
Wrong

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

21

$5,413

Shaw One Vote

Candidate

Shaw, G

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

247

$72,600

CFIF Shaw
Tough Place

Special
interest
group

CFIF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

1,255

$512,302

CFIF Paseur The
Whole Truth

Special
interest
group

CFIF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

1,189

$453,227

10949

$3,591,536

Promote

•

620

$169,640

•

•

•

State Total
Kentucky
Abramson
Neighbors
Support

Candidate

Abramson, LH

Non Partisan

Promote

•

61

$21,877

Abramson Choice
Is Clear

Candidate

Abramson, LH

Non Partisan

Promote

•

55

$18,375

Abramson My
Mom

Candidate

Abramson, LH

Non Partisan

Promote

•

32

$11,597

Shake True Story
Ex-Husband

Candidate

Shake, J

Non Partisan

Promote

90

$29,245

Shake
Homegrown
Success

Candidate

Shake, J

Non Partisan

Promote

75

$23,864

Shake True Story
Ex-Husband 2

Candidate

Shake, J

Non Partisan

Promote

21

$8,677

334

$113,635

•

245

$22,407

•

234

$20,040

479

$42,447

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

State Total
Idaho
Bradbury
Questions

Candidate

Bradbury, J

Non Partisan

Promote

Bradbury Facts

Candidate

Bradbury, J

Non Partisan

Promote

•

State Total
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

87

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Louisiana
Belsome Bully

Candidate

Belsome, R

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

•

Belsome People's
Court

Candidate

Belsome, R

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

•

Belsome Some
Ethics

Candidate

Belsome, R

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

Guidry Ethics
And Values

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Guidry Message
To America

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Guidry Strange
Characters

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Guidry Set
Record Straight

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Guidry Quiet
Strength

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Stsupctla Guidry
Louisiana's Rising

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Guidry Best For
Louisiana

Candidate

Guidry, G

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Hughes Where In
The World

Candidate

Hughes, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Hughes Bio

Candidate

Hughes, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Hughes Vote
Early

Candidate

Hughes, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Kimball
Grandmother

Candidate

Kimball, K

Kimball Set New
Standards

Candidate

Kimball Built
Reputation

Candidate

88	

108

$66,506

93

$56,247

18

$10,605

164

$51,723

143

$47,488

36

$15,318

45

$14,412

43

$11,133

21

$6,955

19

$6,708

55

$46,872

•

49

$34,123

Promote

•

29

$29,634

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

•

183

$75,779

Kimball, K

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

•

185

$71,164

Kimball, K

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

159

$57,677

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

Appendix 2: Supreme Court TV Advertisements, 2008

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Louisiana, continued
Kuhn Most
Experienced

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Kuhn Walter
Reed

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Kuhn Some
Ethics

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Kuhn Fails The
Test

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Kuhn Mike
Foster

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Kuhn Most
Experienced

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Kuhn November
2

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Kuhn Most
Important Thing

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Kuhn Guidry's
Victims

Candidate

Kuhn, J

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Lacan Guidry Big
Differences

Special
interest
group

LCAN

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Contrast

•

Lacan Guidry Big
Differences 3

Special
interest
group

LCAN

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Contrast

Lacan Guidry Big
Differences Rev

Special
interest
group

LCAN

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Contrast

Lacan Kuhn
Smear Squad 18
Months

Special
interest
group

LCAN

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

AFJ Guidry
Pollster

Special
interest
group

AFJ

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

AFGG Candidate
Endorsements

Special
interest
group

AFGG

Non Partisan

Promote

AFGG Alliance
Recommends 7

Special
interest
group

AFGG

Non Partisan

Promote

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Promote

•

•

•

176

$63,253

80

$30,020

86

$25,825

52

$23,607

66

$23,320

176

$63,253

39

$13,540

19

$5,633

12

$3,857

•

150

$100,740

•

•

163

$86,535

•

•

15

$6,376

•

59

$30,187

69

$40,192

•

39

$6,222

•

14

$3,064

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

89

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Louisiana, continued
RDO Moreno
Belsome
Cannizzaro
Skrmetta

Special
interest
group

RDO

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

•

6

$3,375

RDO
Endorses
Candidates

Special
interest
group

RDO

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

•

5

$2,040

2454

$1,097,519

880

$299,029

869

$279,067

390

$134,815

358

$118,136

141

$38,248

1,066

$399,096

105

$82,556

State Total
Michigan
Taylor Lies About
Chief Justice

Candidate

Taylor, C

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Taylor Earn Your
Way

Candidate

Taylor, C

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Taylor
Unqualified
Hathaway

Candidate

Taylor, C

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

Taylor Right To
Be Protected

Candidate

Taylor, C

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Taylor Works
Hard

Candidate

Taylor, C

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

Hathaway Taylor
Fell Asleep

Candidate

Hathaway, DM

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

MDCC Taylor
Bush's Agenda

Party

MDSCC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

MDSCC Taylor
The Sleeping
Judge

Party

MDSCC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

1,450

$701,681

MDCC Taylor
Wake Up Call 15

Party

MDSCC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

1,020

$250,967

MDCC Taylor
George Bush

Party

MDSCC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

85

$57,486

MDCC Taylor
Good Soldier

Party

MDSCC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

136

$53,390

MDCC Taylor
Good Soldier 2

Party

MDSCC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

31

$18,052

90	

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

Appendix 2: Supreme Court TV Advertisements, 2008

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Michigan, continued
MRP Hathaway
Unqualified

Party

MRP

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

•

MCC Taylor
Tough On Crime

Special
interest
group

MCC

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Promote

•

MCC Hathaway
Tough On
Predators

Special
interest
group

MCC

Business,
Medical,
Republican

Attack

•

•

State Total

644

$401,259

1,153

$750,772

55

$54,097

8383

$3,638,651

84

$34,123

299

$110,368

287

$55,984

150

$37,040

Mississippi
Chandler Man Of
Character

Candidate

Chandler, D

Non Partisan

Promote

•

Kitchens Blessed
60

Candidate

Kitchens, J

Non Partisan

Promote

•

Kitchens Out Of
My Kitchen

Candidate

Kitchens, J

Non Partisan

Promote

•

Kitchens Blessed

Candidate

Kitchens, J

Non Partisan

Promote

•

Smith Protecting
Children

Candidate

Smith, J.

Non Partisan

Promote

•

485

$77,632

Smith Measure
Man's Character

Candidate

Smith, J.

Non Partisan

Promote

•

276

$56,485

Smith Rated
Efficient

Candidate

Smith, J

Non Partisan

Promote

•

145

$42,535

Smith Record Of
Integrity

Candidate

Smith, J

Non Partisan

Promote

•

72

$20,370

LEAA Diaz
Protect Our
Families

Special
interest
group

LEAA

Non Partisan

Attack

•

770

$337,519

LEAA Smith
Protect Our
Families

Special
interest
group

LEAA

Non Partisan

Promote

•

•

1,195

$322,957

Stoplaw Smith
Serving Ms

Special
interest
group

SLAM

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

562

$132,259

MFEP Smith Tort
Reform

Special
interest
group

MFEP

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

238

$67,797

4,563

$1,295,069

•

•

•

State Total

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

91

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Montana
STSUPCTMT
Mcgrath Pam
Bucy

Candidate

McGrath, M

Non Partisan

Promote

•

206

$22,916

STSUPCTMT
Mcgrath Mike
Menahan

Candidate

McGrath, M

Non Partisan

Promote

•

184

$19,099

STSUPCTMT
Mcgrath Bill
Slaughter

Candidate

McGrath, M

Non Partisan

Promote

•

181

$18,786

571

$60,801

668

$148,586

•

220

$58,660

•

161

$27,028

1,049

$234,274

State Total
North Carolina
Edmunds These
People 15

Candidate

Edmunds, B

Public funding

Promote

•

Reynolds
Understand

Candidate

Reynolds, S

Public funding

Promote

•

Reynolds
Understand 15

Candidate

Reynolds, S

Public funding

Promote

•

State Total
Nevada
Allf Endorsements

Candidate

Allf, N

Non Partisan

Promote

•

398

$143,830

Allf Bio

Candidate

Allf, N

Non Partisan

Promote

•

218

$123,008

Allf Bio Rev

Candidate

Allf, N

Non Partisan

Promote

•

175

$23,728

Chairez Bio 60

Candidate

Chairez, D

Non Partisan

Promote

•

184

$131,905

Gibbons Years Of
Experience

Candidate

Gibbons, M

Non Partisan

Promote

•

360

$108,970

Gibbons Top
Rated

Candidate

Gibbons, M

Non Partisan

Promote

•

357

$101,712

Pickering Blew
The Whistle Rev

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

354

$204,447

Pickering Right
Experience

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

287

$107,995

Pickering Praise

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

208

$85,728

Pickering Only
Right Experience

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

236

$84,841

Pickering Only
Right Experience
2

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

272

$63,328

Pickering The
Choice Rev

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Contrast

•

117

$51,748

Pickering Blew
The Whistle Sp

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

69

$28,959

Pickering The
Choice

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Contrast

•

221

$28,034

92	

•

•

•

•

•

•

Appendix 2: Supreme Court TV Advertisements, 2008

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Nevada, continued
Pickering Right
Experience Rev

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

Pickering Blew
The Whistle
Rev 2

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

•

Pickering Blew
The Whistle

Candidate

Pickering, K

Non Partisan

Promote

Schumacher
Proud Of Mom

Candidate

Schumacher, D

Non Partisan

Promote

Schumacher I'm
Voting Not A
Judge

Candidate

Schumacher, D

Non Partisan

Schumacher I'm
Voting

Candidate

Schumacher, D

Non Partisan

194

$28,020

•

•

58

$8,080

•

•

13

$4,699

•

123

$89,296

Contrast

•

57

$31,109

Promote

•

5

$1,069

3,906

$1,450,506

State Total
Ohio
O'Connor Voice
Plain Dealer 15

Candidate

O'Connor, M

Business,
medical,
Republican

O'Connor Voice
Dispatch 15

Candidate

O'Connor, M

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

•

381

$76,185

O'Connor Voice
Police Fire 15

Candidate

O'Connor, M

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

•

407

$63,278

Russo Facts

Candidate

Russo, J

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

40

$28,054

Stratton Big
Heart

Candidate

Stratton, E

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

564

$117,121

Stratton Rated
Excellent 15

Candidate

Stratton, E

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

498

$109,446

Stratton Velvet
Hammer 10

Candidate

Stratton, E

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

490

$98,231

PFOF Stratton
Eyes Of A Child

Special
interest
group

PFOF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

1,237

$477,175

PFOF O'Connor
Peaceful Night
Rev

Special
interest
group

PFOF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

•

424

$160,139

PFOF O’Connor
Peaceful Night

Special
interest
group

PFOF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

•

99

$47,309

4,430

$1,258,831

Promote

•

•

290

$81,893

•

•

State Total
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

93

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Texas
Jefferson Only In
America

Candidate

Jefferson, W

Business,
medical,
Republican

Jefferson Rose To
Chief Justice

Candidate

Jefferson, W

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

Wainwright
Activist Judges

Candidate

Wainwright, D

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

Yanez Ideal World

Candidate

Yanez, L

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

Jordan Yanez
Houston

Party

TDP

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

Jefferson
Wainwright
Johnson

Party

HCRP

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

Rising Gas Prices

Party

EPCDP

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

Promote

•

569

$400,980

4

$3,504

299

$292,123

65

$31,714

2,075

$904,978

705

$463,368

33

$8,657

3,750

$2,105,324

148

$31,238

91

$17,795

389

$71,269

•

•

•

•

•

•

State Total
West Virginia
STSUPCTWV
Bastress Bio

Candidate

Bastress, B

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Bastress Warped
Justice

Candidate

Bastress, B

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Bio

Candidate

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Bio 60

Candidate

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

•

123

$54,070

STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Bio
Rev 60

Candidate

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

•

80

$17,430

STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Ketchup
Guy

Candidate

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

565

$120,501

STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Ketchup
Guy Rev

Candidate

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

1,022

$166,238

STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Mumbo
Jumbo

Candidate

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

228

$49,255

94	

•

•

•

Appendix 2: Supreme Court TV Advertisements, 2008

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

West Virginia, continued
STSUPCTWV
Ketchum Take A
Hike

Ketchum, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Candidate

Attack

STSUPCTWV
Maynard I Like
Spike

Candidate

Maynard, S

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Maynard Menace

Candidate

Maynard, S

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

STSUPCTWV
Maynard
Newspapers
Endorse

Candidate

Maynard, S

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Maynard Son Of
West Virginia

Candidate

Maynard, S

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Walker Always

Candidate

Walker, B

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Walker Believe

Candidate

Walker, B

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Workman
Integrity

Candidate

Workman, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

STSUPCTWV
Workman
Working People

Candidate

Workman, M

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

STSUPCTWV
Workman
Working People
Rev

Candidate

Workman, M

STSUPCTWV
WVBCT
Maynard
Denouncement

Special
interest
group

STSUPCTWV
WVCOC
Maynard For The
Record

•

16

$2,566

168

$27,617

66

$12,948

•

139

$25,475

•

192

$45,215

•

•

•

•

•

160

$27,463

•

•

270

$52,407

•

209

$34,990

Promote

•

203

$25,479

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

50

$7,039

WVBCT

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

87

$46,638

Special
interest
group

WVCOC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

386

$109,918

STSUPCTWV
WVCOC
Maynard For The
Record Rev

Special
interest
group

WVCOC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

26

$10,388

STSUPCTWV
WVCOC
Maynard True
Friend

Special
interest
group

WVCOC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

122

$19,626

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

•

•

•

•

95

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

West Virginia, continued
STSUPCTWV
Wvcoc Mcgraw
Enough

Special
interest
group

WVCOC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

STSUPCTWV
Wvcoc Walker
Treated Fairly

Special
interest
group

WVCOC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

•

•

State Total

732

$165,450

579

$127,205

6,051

1,268,220

Wisconsin
Butler
Battleground

Candidate

FoJLB

Non Partisan

Promote

•

•

940

$181,952

Butler Kohl For
Butler

Candidate

FOJLB

Non Partisan

Promote

•

•

474

$111,239

Butler It's An
Honor

Candidate

FOJLB

Non Partisan

Promote

•

•

114

$17,269

Butler Shame

Candidate

FOJLB

Non Partisan

Contrast

•

29

$7,221

Gableman Slimy
Attacks

Candidate

Gableman, M

Non Partisan

Promote

•

241

$48,823

Gableman
Shadowy Special
Interests

Candidate

Gableman, M

Non Partisan

Contrast

•

106

$45,013

CFAF Butler
Murdered Wife

Special
interest
group

CFAF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

687

$222,374

CFAF Butler
Ralph Armstrong
2

Special
interest
group

CFAF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

301

$108,652

CFAF Butler
Ralph Armstrong

Special
interest
group

CFAF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

186

$52,433

CFAF Butler
Ralph Armstrong
3

Special
interest
group

CFAF

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

39

$14,619

CFG Criminals
Threaten

Special
interest
group

CFG

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

1,191

$465,431

GWC Butler
Who Can

Special
interest
group

GWC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Promote

•

960

$277,374

GWC Remember
Mike Gableman

Special
interest
group

GWC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

•

855

$272,487

GWC Meet Mike
Gableman

Special
interest
group

GWC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

•

780

$267,927

GWC Gableman
Too Far

Special
interest
group

GWC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

•

•

835

$251,373

96	

•

•
•

Appendix 2: Supreme Court TV Advertisements, 2008

Estimated Cost

Spot Count

Ethics

Not Applicable

Attack

Role of Judges

Civil Rights

Conservative Values

Family Values

Criticism for Decisions

Special Interest

Criminal Justice

Civil Justice

Traditional

Tone

Interest

Who

Sponsor

Creative Name

Wisconsin, continued
GWC Better
Choice

Special
interest
group

GWC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Contrast

GWC It's Mike
Gableman

Special
interest
group

GWC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

Attack

WEAC Gableman
Imagine

Special
interest
group

WEAC

Labor, trial
lawyer,
Democrat

WMC Loophole
Louie

Special
interest
group

WMC

WMC Butler
Common Sense

Special
interest
group

WMC Gableman
Thank Judges 2
WMC Gableman
Thank Judges

•

•

193

$96,034

•

6

$3,773

Attack

•

187

$48,321

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

1,718

$524,212

WMC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Attack

•

1,350

$444,250

Special
interest
group

WMC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

751

$323,544

Special
interest
group

WMC

Business,
medical,
Republican

Promote

•

17

$4,836

11,960

$3,789,157

•

State Total

Abbreviations
AFGG	
AFJ	
CFAF	
CFG	
CFIF	
EPCDP	
GWC	
HCRP	
LCAN	
LEAA	
MCC	
MDSCC	
MFEP	
MRP	
PFOF	
RDO	
SLAM	
TDP	
WEAC	
WMC	
WVBCT	
WVCOC	

Alliance for Good Government
Alliance for Justice
Coalition for America’s Families
Club for Growth
Center for Individual Freedom
El Paso County Democratic Party
Greater Wisconsin Committee
Harris County Republican Party
Louisiana Conservative Action Network
Law Enforcement Alliance of America
Michigan Chamber of Commerce
Michigan Democratic State Central Committee
Mississippians for Economic Progress
Michigan Republican Party
Partnership for Ohio’s Future
Regular Democratic Organization
Stop Lawsuit Abuse in Mississippi
Texas Democratic Party
Wisconsin Education Association Council
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce
West Virginia Building & Construction Trades PAC
West Virginia Chamber of Commerce

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

97

Appendix 3

Facts About
State Court Election and
Appointment Systems
Judicial Elections: A National Overview
➜➜ 22 states hold at least some competitive elections for state Supreme Court justices.
➜➜ 16 states hold only one-candidate retention elections for Supreme Court justices.

More information
@justiceatstake.org

➜➜ Thus, Supreme Court justices face some form of election in 38 states.
➜➜ When local general jurisdiction trial courts are considered, appellate and trial judges face
some form of election in 39 states.

Judicial Appointments: A National Overview
➜➜ 29 states initially appoint Supreme Court justices.*
➜➜ 24 states use a system known as merit selection. Governors select justices from slates of nominees submitted to them by nonpartisan commissions.
➜➜ 5 states use other appointment systems, such as gubernatorial or legislative appointments,
without any use of nonpartisan nominating commissions.

Public Financing States
As of June 2010, four states with competitive elections provide public financing for appellate candidates: North Carolina (enacted in 2002); New Mexico (enacted in 2007); and Wisconsin (enacted in
2009). In 2010, West Virginia enacted a pilot public financing program for the 2012 state Supreme
Court of Appeals elections.

To learn more about which states use each system, visit the American Judicature
Society’s “Judicial Selection in the States” website, at www.ajs.org, or visit the
“State Issues” section at www.justiceatstake.org.

*In a unique hybrid
system, New
Mexico Supreme
Court justices are
appointed, but must
face one partisan
election to stay in
office. Thus, New
Mexico is listed in
both the election
and appointment
categories.

Appendix 4

About the Authors

James J. Sample is an Associate Professor at Hofstra University School of Law.
From 2005-2009, Professor Sample served as Counsel at the Brennan Center
for Justice, where he litigated and wrote on issues involving campaign finance,
voting rights, and judicial independence. Previously, he worked on Montana
Governor Brian Schweitzer’s 2004 campaign and clerked for the Honorable
Judge Sidney R. Thomas of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Professor Sample is widely quoted by the national press on courts issues, and
his articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, Slate, Politico, and the
HuffingtonPost. Professor Sample’s recent scholarship includes “Caperton:
Correct Today; Compelling Tomorrow” (Syracuse Law Review 2010), and
“Court Reform Enters the Post-Caperton Era” (Drake Law Review 2010). While
at the Brennan Center, he served as counsel on certiorari and merits stages
briefs in support of the Petitioners in Caperton v. A.T. Massey Coal Co. Professor
Sample received his JD from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske
Stone and James Kent Scholar and a Notes Editor on the Columbia Law Review. Before law school
he was a three-time Emmy Award winner for his work with NBC Sports. He can be reached at james.
sample@hofstra.edu.

Adam Skaggs is Counsel in the Brennan Center for Justice’s Democracy Program,
where he works on a range of judicial independence, voting rights, and election
administration issues. Before joining the Brennan Center, he was a litigation
associate at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP. In 2003, Mr. Skaggs
graduated summa cum laude with a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School, and was a
member of the Brooklyn Law Review. He subsequently clerked for Judge Stanley
Marcus of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit and Judge Edward Korman, Chief
Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York. Mr. Skaggs received an M.S.
in Urban Affairs from Hunter College of the City University of New York, and holds a B.A., awarded
with distinction, from Swarthmore College.

Jonathan Blitzer is a former Research Associate with the Fair
Courts program at the Brennan Center. He graduated from Columbia
University, with a degree in English and Philosophy, in 2007.

100	

Appendix 4: About the Authors

Linda Casey is lead researcher at the nonpartisan, nonprofit
National Institute on Money in State Politics. In addition to comprehensive research duties, she has focused on judicial elections
since 2001. “High Court Contests: Competition, Controversy
and Cash in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin,” “Diversity in State
Judicial Campaigns, 2007-¬2008,” “Judicial Diversity and Money
in Politics: AL, GA, IL, NM, NC, OH, PA, WA, WI.” Ms. Casey
earned degrees in political science and sociology from Carroll
College, in Helena, Montana. Before joining the National Institute in 1996, she worked for several
nonprofit organizations and served as a financial officer for a number of statewide and legislative
political campaigns in Montana.

Charles W. Hall is Director of Communications for the Justice at
Stake Campaign. A career journalist, he worked for 20 years as a
reporter and editor for the Washington Post, including extensive
stints covering federal and local courts. Before joining Justice at
Stake in 2008, Mr. Hall was manager of presidential communications for the American Bar Association. He also is active in civic
affairs in Northern Virginia, and has had numerous commentaries
published on regional land use policies. Mr. Hall can be reached
at chall@justiceatstake.org.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

101

Photo Sources

Page 4: Theodore B. Olson. Source: Courtesy of Theodore B. Olson
Page 8: Chief Justice Wallace Jefferson. Source: Courtesy of the Texas Supreme Court
Page 15: J. Mark White. Source: Courtesy of J. Mark White
Page 22: Gov. Edward Rendell. Source: Courtesy of Pennsylvania governor’s office
Page 27: Justice Paul Pfeifer. Source: Courtesy of the Ohio Supreme Court
Page 33: Justice Louis Butler. Source: Webcast of O’Connor Project conference at Georgeton
University Law School, http://www.law.georgetown.edu/webcast/eventDetail.cfm?eventID=625.
Page 38: Karl Rove. Source: Huffington Post
Page 40: Bernard Marcus. Source: www.emery.edu
Page 41: Thomas Donohue. Source: online.wsj.com
Page 41: Maurice Greenberg. Source: Politicolnews.com
Page 41: Roy Barnes. Source: Atlanta Business Chronicle
Page 43: John Engler. Source: Politico.com
Page 45: Mike McCabe. Source: Courtesy of Mike McCabe
Page 45: Fred Baron. Source: Pegasusnews.com
Page 45: Bob Perry. Source: StarTribune.com
Page 47: Jere Beasley and Greg Allen. Source: Beasley Allen web site
Page 47: Judge Deborah Bell Paseur. Source: League of Women Voters of Alabama
Page 48: Justice Ann Walsh Bradley. Source: Courtesy of Wisconsin Supreme Court
Page 49: Chief Justice Carol Hunstein. Source: Fresh Loaf politics blog
Page 49: Chief Justice Thomas Moyer. Source: Courtesy of Ohio Supreme Court
Page 52: Professor Amanda Frost. Source: Courtesy of Amanda Frost
Page 52: Former Chief Justice Thomas R Phillips. Source: Courtesy of Justice Phillips
Page 52: Don Blankenship and former West Virginia Chief Justice Elliott “Spike” Maynard: Source:
Courtesy of Hugh Caperton
Page 53: Hugh Caperton. Source: Courtesy of Hugh Caperton
Page 53: Chief Justice Marilyn Kelly. Source: Courtesy of Michigan Supreme Court
102	

Photo Sources

Page 53: John Grisham. Source: Legal Broadcast Network news blog
Page 55: West Virginia Justice Brent D. Benjamin. Source: http://lawyersusadcdicta.files.wordpress.
com/2009/01/benjamin.jpg
Page 56: Blankenship and Maynard. Source: Courtesy of High Caperton
Page 56: Andrew Frey. Source: RepublicanGazette.com
Page 56: Theodore B. Olson. Source: Courtesy of Theodore B. Olson
Page 57: Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Source: Dane Penland, Smithsonian Institution,
courtesy of the Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States.
Page 60: Justice Anthony M. Kennedy. Source: pbs.org
Page 61: Justice Antonin Scalia. Source: law.cornell.edu.
Page 62: Justice John Paul Stevens. Source: DigitalJournal.com
Page 64: Professor Kathleen Sullivan. Source: Courtesy of Kathleen Sullivan
Page 66: Professor Richard Hasen. Source: Courtesy of Richard Hasen
Page 68: Judge Wanda Bryant. Source: North Carolina court system.
Page 73: Former Attorney General John Ashcroft, from youtube clip of TV ad.

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

103

Index

104	

A

B

Abrahamson, Shirley (Wisconsin chief justice)
5, 22
AIG Insurance 3, 39, 41
Alabama 2–3, 6–7, 8–13, 15–17, 18, 19–21, 26–27,
29, 34–35, 38–39, 41, 42–44, 46, 50, 74
Alabama Automobile Dealers Association 15
Alabama Civil Justice Reform Committee 13,
15, 21, 50–51
Alabama Democratic Party, 10–11, 13, 15, 18, 21,
39, 46–47, 50–51
Alabama Forestry Association 15
Alaska 6–7, 70
Alexander, Gerry (Washington justice) 39
Alito, Samuel (U.S. Supreme Court justice) 76
American Association of Justice 41
American Bar Association 44, 58, 61, 70, 75
American Council of Life Insurers 41
American Insurance Association 49
American Judicature Society 6, 75
American Justice Partnership 3, 13, 21, 28,
41–43, 49–51, 73–75
American Taxpayers Alliance 3, 13, 28, 43, 50–51
American Tort Reform Association 3, 16, 41,
43–44, 50–51
Americans Tired of Lawsuit Abuse 3, 38–39,
42–44, 50–51
American Trial Lawyers Association 41
And For the Sake of the Kids 50–51, 56
Arkansas 6–7, 20, 27
Ashcroft, John (former U.S. attorney general)
73, 75
Avery v. State Farm 57

Barnes, Roy (Georgia governor) 41, 45
Baron, Fred 44–45, 48, 50–51
Bauer v. Shepard 61
Beasley, Allen, Crow, Methvin, Portis & Miles
3, 46–47
Benjamin, Brent D. (West Virginia justice) 12,
55–60
Blagojevich, Rod (Illinois governor) 67
Blankenship, Don 9–13, 19, 21, 52, 55–56, 60, 62
Bolin, Michael 15
Bopp, James Jr. 53, 62
Boston Globe 72
Bradley, Ann Walsh (Wisconsin justice) 48
Brennan Center for Justice 59–60, 70
Brown, Kirk 42
Bryant, Wanda (North Carolina appellate
judge) 68, 69
Buckley v. Valeo 64
Bush, George W. (U.S. president) 28, 35, 56
Business & Industry Political Education
Committee 21, 42–43
Business Council of Alabama, 3, 13, 15, 20–21,
38, 41, 43, 50–51
Butler, Louis (Wisconsin justice) 2, 19, 32–33,
35–36, 42, 48

C
California 6–7, 70–71, 74
Campaign Legal Center 59
Caperton, Hugh 12, 53, 56
Caperton v. Massey 3–4, 9, 12, 21, 24, 53, 55–61,
63–65, 67, 70, 72, 74

Index

Center for Individual Freedom 13, 16–18, 28–29,
35, 41, 43–44, 50–51
Center for Political Accountability 59
Chamber of Commerce, Illinois 16, 40, 43
Chamber of Commerce, Michigan 13, 18, 28,
30, 35, 43, 48
Chamber of Commerce, Ohio 43
Chamber of Commerce, U.S. 3–4, 10–11, 13–14,
16, 18, 21, 28, 39–41, 43, 45, 48, 50–51, 74–75
Chamber of Commerce, West Virginia 21, 43
Chrysler 39, 41, 49
Citizens for an Independent Court 28
Citizens for a Strong Ohio 28, 41
Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission
2–3, 9, 45, 53, 62–65, 70, 76
Clark, Marcus (Louisiana justice) 22
Club for Growth 19, 48, 50–51
Coalition for America’s Families 19, 32, 35, 48
Cobb, Sue Bell (Alabama chief justice) 15, 39
Colorado 71
Coca-Cola Bottlers 49
Committee for Economic Development 58, 68
Conference of Chief Justices 9, 59–60
Crawford, John D. 46–47
CRC Communications 39, 45, 73

F
Factcheck.org (Annenberg Public Policy
Center) 30, 32
Faircloth, Jimmy (Louisiana candidate) 22
Federalist Society 39, 45, 73–75
Florida 6–7
Forbes magazine 41, 43
Franklin PAC 15
Frey, Andrew 56
Frost, Amanda 52
Frost, Martin (Texas congressman) 45
Fulbright & Jaworski 45

G
Gableman, Michael (Wisconsin justice) 2, 19,
32–33, 35–36, 48
Garman (Illinois justice) 43
Georgia 2, 6–7, 15, 20, 27, 39, 42–43 45, 49, 61
Georgia Hospital Association 49
Gibbons, Mark (Nevada justice) 21
Greater Wisconsin Committee 13, 16, 18, 22,
28–29, 35, 42, 48, 50–51
Greenberg, Maurice “Hank” 41
Grisham, John 32–33, 53, 56
Groen, John (Washington candidate) 39, 42

D
Delaware 74
Democratic Judicial Campaign Committee 41,
44–45, 48, 50–51
Dial, Eric 49
Diaz, Oliver Jr. (Mississippi justice) 21, 34, 44
Donohue, Thomas 40–41
Doyle, Jim (Wisconsin governor) 42, 69
Duke v. Leake 63, 65

E
Edwards, John (N.C. senator) 45
Engler, John 41–43
Enron Corp. 45
Exxon Corp. 46

The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

H
Harris Interactive 69
Harwood, Bernard (Alabama justice) 15
Hathaway, Diane (Michigan justice) 2, 19,
29–30, 35, 42, 48
Hawaii 70, 71
Haynes & Boone 45
Hillco Partners 45
Hirshon, Robert 61
Hofstra University School of Law 76
Home Depot 3, 39–41
Humber, W. Thomas 44
Hunstein, Carol (Georgia chief justice) 42, 49

105

I
Idaho 6–7, 20, 27, 29, 31
Illinois 6–7, 9–13, 16, 20, 27–28, 38, 43–44,
50–51, 57, 67
Illinois Campaign for Political Reform 16
Illinois Chamber of Commerce 16, 40, 43
Illinois Civil Justice League 43, 50–51
Illinois Democratic Party, 3, 10–11, 13, 16, 28,
50–51
Illinois Republican Party, 10–11, 13, 28
IMPAC (Improve Mississippi Political Action
Committee) 3, 21, 50–51
Iowa 74
Indiana 61, 74
Institute for Legal Reform 43, 74–75
Institute for the Advancement of the American
Legal System 70
Intel Corp. 58

J
Jackson (Miss.) Clarion–Ledger 72
J.A.I.L. 4 Judges 71
Jefferson, Wallace (Texas chief justice) 8, 12
Jindal, Bobby (Louisiana governor) 22
Justice at Stake Campaign 59, 61–62, 64,
67–71, 74, 76

K
Kansas 4, 71, 73–75
Kansas Judicial Review 50–51, 73
Karmeier, Lloyd (Illinois justice) 12, 16, 57
Kelly, Marilyn (Michigan chief justice) 53
Kennedy, Anthony M. (U.S. Supreme Court
justice) 12, 60, 65
Kentucky 6–7, 20, 27, 29
Kitchens, Jim (Mississippi justice) 21, 42
Koschnick, Randy (Wisconsin candidate) 22

L
Lake, Celinda 45
Lally-Green, Maureen (Pennsylvania candidate)
21, 44,
Lautenschlager, Peg (Wisconsin attorney
general) 45
106	

Law Enforcement Alliance of America 13, 21,
34, 41, 44, 50–51
Lawsuit Reform PAC 15
League of Women Voters 70
Limit the Judges 50–51
Lockheed Martin Corp. 58
Los Angeles Times 68, 72
Louisiana 2, 6–7, 16–17, 20–22, 27, 29, 31, 34,
38, 50, 74

M
Maag, Gordon (Illinois candidate) 12, 16, 57
Marcus, Bernard 40–41
Maryland 71
Mauro, Tony 42
Maynard, Elliott “Spike” (W. Va. chief justice)
21, 56
McCabe, Mike 45, 48
McCaffery, Seamus (Pennsylvania justice) 22
McCain-Feingold (BCRA) law 69
McGraw, Warren (West Virginia justice) 28,
55–56
McRae, Chuck (Mississippi justice) 21
Melvin, Joan Orie (Pennsylvania justice) 12, 16,
22
Memphis Commercial Appeal 74
MGM Mirage casino 21
Michigan 2, 4, 6–7, 9–14, 16–20, 27–31, 34–35,
38–39, 41–43, 45, 48, 50, 53, 61, 67, 70
Michigan Democratic Party 18, 28–30, 35, 48,
50–51
Michigan Republican Party 28, 30, 35, 48
Midwest Democracy Network 62
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 72
Minnesota 6–7, 20, 24, 68, 71, 75
Mississippi 6–7, 9, 11–12, 14, 16–17, 20–21,
26–27, 29, 31–32, 34, 38, 42–44, 50, 69, 72, 74
Mississippi Association for Justice 42
Mississippians for Economic Progress 21, 43
Missouri 4, 45, 68, 70, 73–75
Missouri State Bar 73
Montana 6–7, 20, 27, 29, 31, 71
Moyer, Thomas (Ohio chief justice) 49, 71
Moyers, Bill 52

Index

N
Nabers, Drayton 15
National Association of Manufacturers 3, 13,
18, 21, 28, 38–39, 41–43, 48–51, 73
National Institute on Money in State Politics
11, 69
National Rifle Association 21, 41, 44, 50–51
National Smokers Alliance 21, 44
Nebraska 74
Nevada 4, 6–7, 9, 10–12, 16–17, 20–21, 27, 29,
31, 34, 68, 71–72, 75
New Mexico 4, 6–7, 20, 27, 69
New York Times 27, 52, 58, 62, 72, 76
North Carolina 3–4, 6–7, 20, 27, 29, 62–63 65,
68–70
North Dakota 6–8, 74

O
O’Connor, Sandra Day (U.S. Supreme Court
justice) 4, 32, 57, 73, 76
Ohio 6–7, 9–12, 17–20, 26–29, 31, 38, 41, 43,
49–50, 7–72
Olson, Theodore B. (Former U.S. solicitor
general) 4, 56, 60
Oregon 6–7, 20, 27, 42, 70, 71

P
Panella, Jack (Pennsylvania candidate) 16, 22
Partnership for Ohio’s Future 18, 28, 43
Paseur, Deborah Bell (Alabama candidate) 3, 15,
21, 29, 34–35, 39, 46–47
Pennsylvania 2, 6–8, 9–13, 16–18, 20–22, 25,
27–28, 30–31, 36, 39, 44, 68
Pennsylvania Republican Party 12–13, 16, 18, 22,
28, 50–51
Pennsylvanians for Modern Courts 68
Pepsico 58
Pero, Dan 42
Perry, Bob 39, 45
Pfeifer, Paul (Ohio justice) 12, 27
Philadelphia Trial Lawyers Association 3, 13, 16,
18, 22, 50–51
Philip Morris 44
Phillips, Thomas (former Texas chief justice)
52, 60
The New Politics of Judicial Elections: 2000–2009	

Pickering, Kris (Nevada justice) 21
Pierce, Randy “Bubba” (Mississippi justice) 34
Pro Business PAC 15
Public Citizen 44

Q
Quie, Al (former Minnesota governor) 68

R
Reform Institute 59
Rendell, Edward (Pennyslvania governor) 22
Republican Party of Minnesota v. White 3, 61
Resnick, Alice (Ohio justice) 28
Rich, Howard 3, 50–51
Roberts, Jack (Oregon candidate) 42
Roberts, John G. Jr. (U.S. chief justice) 60
Rove, Karl 3, 38

S
Safety and Prosperity Coalition 28, 42–43,
49–51,
Samuels, Dorothy 76
Sample, James 76
Scalia, Antonin (U.S. Supreme Court justice)
61
Scruggs, Richard 42
See, Harold F. Jr. 15
Senn, Deborah (Washington insurance
commissioner) 45
Shaw, Greg (Alabama justice) 21, 29, 34–35, 39,
44, 46
Siefert v. Alexander 61
Smith, Jim (Mississippi justice) 21, 42–43
South Dakota 6–7, 71
Southeastern Legal Foundation 49
State Farm Insurance 57
Stevens, John Paul (U.S. Supreme Court
justice) 62, 64, 76
St. Louis Post-Dispatch 57, 75
Stop Lawsuit Abuse of Alabama 43
Sullivan, Kathleen 64
Swift Boat veterans 39, 45, 73

107

T
Taylor, Cliff (Michigan chief justice) 17, 19, 28,
30, 35, 42, 48
Teague, John 46–47
Tennessee 45, 73–74
Texans for Lawsuit Reform 45
Texans for Public Justice 45
Texas 2–3, 6–8, 9–12, 16–21, 27–29, 31, 34,
38–39, 42–46, 50, 52, 60
Texas Civil Justice League 43
Texas Democratic Party 18, 39, 45, 50–51
Texas Democratic Trust 45
Toobin, Jeffrey 70
Transparency International USA 58

Wisconsin Right to Life v. Federal Election
Commission 64

Z
Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research
(Wharton School) 59
Zogby International 67

U
USA Today 42, 67, 72
U.S. Chamber of Commerce see, Chamber of
Commerce, U.S.
U.S. Supreme Court 3, 9, 12, 24, 45, 55–65, 72,
74, 76

V
Vinson & Elkins 45

W
Wall Street Journal 73–75
Wal-Mart 41, 58
Washington 6–7, 20, 24, 27, 38–39, 42, 44–45,
70
Washington Post 72
Weaver v. Bonner 61
West Virginia 2, 4, 6–7, 9–12, 14, 16–17, 19–21,
27–29, 38, 43–44, 50, 52, 55–56, 58–59, 62, 67,
69–72, 74
White, J. Mark 15
Wiggins, Mike (Georgia candidate) 49
Wisconsin 2, 4–7, 9–13, 15–22, 26–33, 35–38,
42–43, 45, 48, 50, 61, 65, 67, 68, 69
Wisconsin Democracy Campaign 45, 48
Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce 3, 13,
16, 18–19, 28, 32, 42–43, 48, 50–51, 65
Wisconsin Realtors Association 65

108	

Index

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The New Politics of Judicial Elections 2000–2009: Decade of Change Published August 2010