In 1986, California vot­ers removed Rose Bird, the state’s first female supreme court chief jus­tice, from office after con­ser­v­a­tive groups spent more than $10 mil­lion in a recall effort that por­trayed her as soft on crime,” empha­siz­ing her court opin­ions over­turn­ing death sen­tences that had been uncon­sti­tu­tion­al­ly imposed. Ten years lat­er, Tennessee Supreme Court Justice Penny White lost a reten­tion elec­tion after death penal­ty pro­po­nents and oth­er con­ser­v­a­tive groups tar­get­ed her for vot­ing with the court major­i­ty in a 3 – 2 deci­sion over­turn­ing a death sen­tence that had been imposed in a rape-mur­der case. Similar efforts to remove jus­tices from state supreme courts in Kansas and Washington failed in the November 8, 2016 elec­tions. As recent events illus­trate the con­tin­u­ing pow­er of mon­ey in judi­cial elec­tions, a new book, The Case of Rose Bird: Gender, Politics, and the California Courts, chron­i­cles Bird’s career and the repeat­ed efforts to remove her from office. A recent report from the Brennan Center for Justice sug­gests that out­side mon­ey con­tin­ues to play an out­sized role in judi­cial elec­tions today. The Brennan Center found that this year, TV spend­ing in state supreme court races set a record of $19.4 mil­lion. Seventeen of the 20 groups that spent mon­ey on such elec­tions this cycle do not dis­close their donors, mak­ing it dif­fi­cult to iden­ti­fy the peo­ple and groups weigh­ing in on judi­cial races. But in Kansas, four of the five jus­tices fac­ing reelec­tion were tar­get­ed for their deci­sion to over­turn the death sen­tences of Reginald and Jonathan Carr, and in the Washington Supreme Court reten­tion elec­tion, busi­ness inter­ests attempt­ed to por­tray Justice Charlie Wiggins as enabling preda­tors.” Both efforts to remove the jus­tices failed. In Kansas, out­side groups spent approx­i­mate­ly $1.7 mil­lion on TV ads, but while a group call­ing itself Kansans for Justice attempt­ed to oust the jus­tices, anoth­er group called Kansans for Fair Courts spent almost equal amounts sup­port­ing reten­tion. All five jus­tices were reelect­ed, but the four who were tar­get­ed by ads aver­aged about 56% sup­port, as com­pared to 71% of the vote for the fifth jus­tice, who was not the focus of TV ads. Alicia Bannon, Senior Counsel at the Brennan Center’s Democracy’s Program, said, This unprece­dent­ed flood of spend­ing from out­side spe­cial inter­ests and secre­tive donors is under­min­ing faith in the fair­ness of our courts and the promise of equal jus­tice for all.”

(K. Cairns, The Case of Rose Bird: Gender, Politics, and the California Courts,” University of Nebraska Press, 2016; C. Thompson, Outside Groups Set Spending Record in Judicial Races,” The Marshall Project, November 15, 2016; Spending By Outside Groups in Judicial Races Hits Record High, Secret Money Dominates,” Brennan Center for Justice, November 15, 2016.) See Books.

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