Show pageBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Merit Selection: The Ultimate Guide to How Judges Are Chosen ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Merit Selection? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you need to hire the best possible heart surgeon for a life-or-death operation. Would you hold a popularity contest and pick the person with the most yard signs and the catchiest campaign slogan? Or would you want a panel of expert doctors and hospital administrators to meticulously review every candidate's qualifications, experience, and skill, and then present you with a short list of the absolute best, from which you could make the final choice? Most of us would choose the second option. We want expertise, not politics, in the operating room. This is the exact philosophy behind **merit selection** of judges. It’s a method for choosing state and local judges that tries to remove partisan politics from the equation and focus instead on professional qualifications—or "merit." It's a hybrid system, blending appointment with a unique form of election to create what supporters believe is a more independent and qualified judiciary. For you, this system directly impacts the fairness and expertise of the judge who might one day hear your case, whether it's a traffic ticket, a business dispute, or a family matter. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **A Focus on Qualifications:** **Merit selection** is a process where a non-partisan commission of lawyers and citizens vets potential judges and recommends a short list of the most qualified candidates to the governor for appointment. [[judicial_nominating_commission]]. * **Reduces Political Influence:** By filtering candidates through an expert panel, **merit selection** aims to reduce the influence of political fundraising, campaign promises, and partisan attacks that can dominate judicial elections. [[separation_of_powers]]. * **Public Has the Final Say:** While judges are initially appointed, they must later face voters in a "yes" or "no" [[retention_election]], where the public decides whether the judge's performance on the bench merits another term. [[state_courts]]. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Merit Selection ===== ==== The Story of Merit Selection: A Historical Journey ==== The way we choose judges has always been a point of debate in America. In the nation's early days, following the English model, judges were appointed. However, during the wave of Jacksonian democracy in the 1830s, a strong populist movement pushed for elected judges, believing it made them more accountable to the people. For nearly a century, this was the dominant method. But by the early 20th century, the cracks were showing. In major cities, powerful political machines and party bosses often controlled judicial elections. Judges were chosen not for their legal minds, but for their loyalty to the machine. Justice was sometimes for sale to the highest bidder or the most politically connected. The push for reform began in earnest during the Progressive Era. In a famous 1906 speech, legal scholar Roscoe Pound condemned the state of the American judiciary, arguing that putting judges on the campaign trail "subjects the judge to the political pressure and the temptations of the politician." The American Bar Association and other reform groups began searching for a better way. The breakthrough came in 1940 in Missouri. Plagued by the corrupt Pendergast political machine in Kansas City, reformers successfully campaigned for a constitutional amendment creating a new system. This new method, which became known as the **"Missouri Plan,"** was the first true merit selection system in the country. It created a nominating commission to screen applicants, gave the governor the power to appoint from the commission's list, and held judges accountable through retention elections. The idea was to combine the best of both worlds: the expertise of an appointment system and the public accountability of an elective one. Over the decades since, dozens of other states have adopted the Missouri Plan or a variation of it, especially for their appellate and supreme courts. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== Merit selection is not a federal concept; it is purely a creature of state law, typically established within a state's constitution or foundational statutes. This ensures the process is embedded in the state's fundamental legal framework, making it difficult to alter for short-term political gain. For example, Article V, Section 25(a) of the **[[missouri_constitution]]** lays out the core of the plan: > "Whenever a vacancy shall occur in the office of judge of any of the following courts of this state, to wit: the supreme court, the court of appeals, or in the office of circuit or associate circuit judge within the city of St. Louis and Jackson County, the governor shall fill such vacancy by appointing one of three persons possessing the qualifications for such office, who shall be nominated and whose names shall be submitted to the governor by a non-partisan judicial commission..." Let's break that down in plain English: * **"Whenever a vacancy shall occur..."**: The process kicks in when a judge retires, resigns, or otherwise leaves the bench. * **"...the governor shall fill such vacancy..."**: The governor makes the final appointment. * **"...by appointing one of three persons..."**: The governor's choice is limited. They can't just pick their best friend or a political donor. They **must** choose from a short list of three names. * **"...nominated and whose names shall be submitted...by a non-partisan judicial commission."**: This is the heart of the system. An independent, non-partisan panel is responsible for finding and vetting the best candidates and creating that short list. This constitutional language creates a critical check on the governor's power and formally establishes the expert commission as the gatekeeper to the bench. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences ==== How a judge gets their robe varies dramatically across the United States. Understanding these differences shows why merit selection is considered a "middle ground" approach. ^ **Method of Judicial Selection** ^ **Federal System** ^ **Missouri (Merit Selection)** ^ **Texas (Partisan Election)** ^ **Wisconsin (Nonpartisan Election)** ^ | **How Judges Get the Job** | The President nominates a candidate. | A non-partisan commission sends a short list to the governor, who must appoint from that list. | Candidates run for office as a Republican, Democrat, or other party member, just like a legislator. | Candidates run for office, but their party affiliation is not listed on the ballot. | | **Who is Involved** | President, U.S. Senate (for confirmation). | Governor, [[judicial_nominating_commission]], voters (in retention elections). | Political parties, voters, campaign donors. | Voters, campaign donors. | | **Term Length** | Lifetime appointment. | Appointed, then serves a short initial term (e.g., 1 year) before facing a retention election for a longer term (e.g., 12 years). | Typically 4-6 year terms, then must run for re-election against an opponent. | 10-year terms (Supreme Court), then must run for re-election against an opponent. | | **Main Philosophy** | Maximize judicial independence from political whims. | Balance independence with public accountability; focus on professional qualifications. | Maximize judicial accountability to the voters and political platforms. | Hold judges accountable to voters without the direct influence of party labels. | | **What It Means For You** | Federal judges are insulated from public opinion, which can be good (protecting minority rights) or bad (unaccountable). | Your judges are vetted for qualifications, but you still get a "yes/no" vote on their performance. The process is less political. | You directly vote for judges, but they often must raise large sums of money and may appear to rule based on party ideology. | You vote for judges, but you must do more research to understand their judicial philosophy without a party label as a shortcut. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== ==== The Anatomy of Merit Selection: Key Components Explained ==== The classic merit selection process, or Missouri Plan, is a three-step dance designed to balance expertise, executive authority, and public accountability. === Element 1: The Judicial Nominating Commission === This is the engine room of the entire system. The **[[judicial_nominating_commission]]** is a panel created specifically to find, interview, and evaluate potential judges. Their sole job is to produce a "short list" (usually three names) of the most highly qualified applicants to send to the governor. The composition of the commission is crucial to its non-partisan nature. A typical commission includes: * **Lawyers elected by their peers:** The state's lawyers, through the [[state_bar_association]], elect several members to the commission. The idea is that lawyers are in the best position to judge a candidate's legal skills, temperament, and reputation. * **Non-lawyer citizens appointed by the governor:** To ensure the commission isn't just an old boys' club of lawyers, the governor appoints several lay citizens. These members represent the public's perspective and look for qualities like common sense, integrity, and community understanding. * **A senior judge (often the Chief Justice of the state):** This member typically serves as the chair of the commission, providing an experienced judicial perspective. They often do not vote except to break a tie. This structure is intentionally designed to be bipartisan or non-partisan, preventing any single group—the governor, the legislature, or the bar association—from dominating the selection process. The commission will advertise a judicial vacancy, accept applications, conduct thorough background checks, review legal writings, and conduct intensive interviews before voting on the final list of nominees. === Element 2: Gubernatorial Appointment === Once the commission finalizes its short list of nominees, the list is sent to the state's governor. The governor then has a set period of time (usually 60 days) to review the finalists and appoint one of them to the vacant judicial seat. This is a critical check and balance. The commission's expertise prevents the governor from appointing an unqualified political crony. At the same time, the governor's final choice ensures that the person who is ultimately accountable to all the state's voters (the governor) makes the final decision. The governor cannot go "off-list." If they fail to make an appointment within the designated time frame, some state plans have a fallback where the commission itself or the Chief Justice makes the appointment. **Hypothetical Example:** A seat opens on the state supreme court. The nominating commission receives 30 applications. After extensive vetting, they send three names to the governor: a widely respected appellate judge, a brilliant law professor, and a seasoned trial lawyer with a reputation for fairness. The governor, after conducting her own interviews, appoints the trial lawyer, believing their real-world courtroom experience is what the high court needs most. === Element 3: The Retention Election === This is where the public comes in. After serving an initial term (typically one to two years), the newly appointed judge does not have to run against an opponent in a traditional election. Instead, they must face a **[[retention_election]]**. The question on the ballot is simple and direct: > "Shall Judge Jane Doe be retained in office?" Voters then choose **YES** or **NO**. * If the judge receives a majority of "YES" votes, they "win" and serve a full new term (often 6, 10, or 12 years). * If the judge receives a majority of "NO" votes, they are removed from office, and the merit selection process begins all over again with the nominating commission. This mechanism is designed to hold judges accountable for their performance, not their politics. Voters are asked to evaluate the judge based on their record on the bench: Are they fair? Are they competent? Do they have a good judicial temperament? It removes the spectacle of two candidates running against each other with attack ads and campaign fundraising, focusing instead on a referendum on the judge's actual job performance. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a Merit Selection System ==== * **Judicial Nominating Commission Members:** These are the gatekeepers. They are a mix of lawyers and non-lawyers tasked with impartially evaluating applicants based on skill, experience, and character. * **The Governor:** The appointer-in-chief. They have the final say from the commission's short list, bringing executive accountability to the process. * **The State Bar Association:** This professional organization of lawyers often plays a formal role in electing lawyer-members to the commission and an informal role in providing information to the public through judicial performance evaluations. * **Judicial Applicants:** These are the lawyers and lower-court judges who aspire to the bench. They must submit detailed applications and subject themselves to intense scrutiny. * **The Public (Voters):** The ultimate check on the system. In retention elections, voters have the power to remove a sitting judge who has proven to be incompetent, biased, or otherwise unfit for office. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook: How to Be an Informed Citizen ===== The merit selection system is designed to be less political, but that doesn't mean your voice doesn't matter. Being an informed citizen is crucial for the system's success. === Step 1: Understand Your State's System === First, find out how judges are selected in your state. Methods can even vary for different levels of courts within the same state (e.g., merit selection for the supreme court, elections for trial courts). - **Action:** Visit the website for the National Center for State Courts (NCSC) or the Brennan Center for Justice. They maintain maps and databases detailing judicial selection methods for all 50 states. Simply search for "judicial selection map" to find these resources. === Step 2: Research the Nominating Commission === If your state uses merit selection, find the official webpage for your state's judicial nominating commission. - **Action:** Look for who the members are. Are they representative of your community? Commission meetings are often public. While you may not be able to speak, you can observe the process. Some commissions also solicit public comment on applicants for a judicial vacancy. This is a direct way to provide input. === Step 3: Evaluate Judges in Retention Elections === This is your most powerful role. When a judge's name appears on your ballot for a retention election, don't just guess or skip it. Your "yes" or "no" vote is a performance review. - **Action: Seek out reliable information.** Do not rely on last-minute, politically-funded attack mailers. Instead, look for: * **Judicial Performance Evaluations:** In many merit selection states, an independent commission is tasked with formally evaluating judges up for retention. They survey lawyers, jurors, court staff, and other judges who have appeared before the judge, and they issue a recommendation (e.g., "Meets Performance Standards"). This is the single best source of non-partisan information. * **State and Local Bar Association Guides:** These groups often provide detailed, non-partisan guides for voters explaining the background and record of each judge on the ballot. * **League of Women Voters:** This respected non-partisan organization often provides guides and information on all candidates and ballot questions, including judicial retention. === Step 4: Engage in the Conversation === The method of selecting judges is a frequent topic of legislative debate. - **Action:** Stay informed about proposed changes to the judicial selection process in your state. Contact your state legislators to voice your opinion on whether the current system is working or if proposed reforms would make it more or less political. ==== Key Information Sources for Voters ==== * **Judicial Performance Evaluations:** These are the gold standard. They are official reports, often mandated by state law, that provide a comprehensive, data-driven review of a judge's performance. They typically grade judges on integrity, legal knowledge, communication skills, and judicial temperament. Search for "[Your State] Commission on Judicial Performance." * **State Bar Association Voter Guides:** Published by the state's professional lawyer organization, these guides often contain biographical information, survey results from attorneys, and explanations of each judge's role. * **Official Voter Information Pamphlets:** Your state's Secretary of State or elections board mails these out before every election. They contain the exact wording of the retention question and sometimes include a statement from the judge. ===== Part 4: Key Debates and Legal Challenges ===== Merit selection is not without its critics or controversies. The debate generally centers on a fundamental tension in American democracy: do we want our judges to be independent and insulated from politics, or do we want them to be directly accountable to the will of the people? ==== The Debate: Independence vs. Accountability ==== This is the core philosophical argument. * **Arguments for Merit Selection (Pro-Independence):** * **Judges should interpret the law, not public opinion.** Proponents argue that judges must be free to make unpopular decisions, such as protecting the rights of a criminal defendant or an unpopular minority group, without fear of being voted out of office. This is the essence of [[judicial_independence]]. * **It reduces the corrosive influence of money.** Judicial elections are increasingly expensive. Merit selection largely removes the need for judges to fundraise from lawyers and special interests who may later appear in their courtroom, avoiding a potential [[conflict_of_interest]]. * **It focuses on qualifications.** A panel of experts is better equipped to assess a candidate's legal knowledge, writing ability, and temperament than the average voter, who may only see a 30-second attack ad. * **Arguments Against Merit Selection (Pro-Accountability):** * **It's elitist and undemocratic.** Critics argue that a small, unelected commission of lawyers and insiders should not have the power to decide who can be a judge. They believe direct elections are the most democratic method and give the people ultimate control. * **It can hide politics, not remove it.** The selection of commission members and the governor's final choice can still be intensely political. Instead of public politics, it becomes "insider" politics. * **Retention elections are not true accountability.** It is extremely rare for a judge to lose a retention election. Without an opponent to highlight a judge's flaws, voters are often uninformed and tend to vote "yes" by default. ==== The Challenge: Diversity on the Bench ==== A significant, ongoing criticism of merit selection is its impact on the diversity of the judiciary. Studies in some states have shown that women and minority candidates are sometimes less likely to be selected by nominating commissions than they are to win in direct elections. Reasons for this are complex and debated, but critics argue that commissions can be risk-averse and may favor candidates from traditional backgrounds (e.g., major law firms, prosecutor's offices). In response, many states have reformed their commission appointment processes and provided diversity and inclusion training to members to proactively address this concern. ==== State Legal Fights: The Battle for Control ==== Because merit selection systems are created by state law, they are often the subject of intense political and legal battles at the state level. These fights rarely make national news but are critically important. The legal challenges often revolve around who controls the nominating commission. * **Example Scenario:** A state legislature, unhappy with the perceived ideology of judges being produced by the system, might pass a new law changing the composition of the nominating commission. For example, they might strip the state bar association of its power to select the lawyer members and give that power to legislative leaders instead. This move is often challenged in court, with opponents arguing it violates the [[separation_of_powers]] by giving the legislative branch too much influence over the judicial branch. These state supreme court cases shape the real-world application and independence of the merit selection system. ===== Part 5: The Future of Merit Selection ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== The fight over how we choose our judges is more intense than ever. The primary battleground for merit selection is the effort by some political actors to politicize what was designed to be a non-partisan process. * **Commission Takeovers:** As mentioned above, the biggest trend is legislative attempts to remake judicial nominating commissions. By changing who gets to appoint the members, a political party can effectively gain control of the pipeline of future judges, undermining the system's core principle of non-partisanship. * **The Rise of "Dark Money" in Retention Elections:** While retention elections are typically quiet affairs, there is a growing trend of special interest groups pouring huge, often undisclosed, sums of money into campaigns to unseat judges over a specific, controversial ruling. This threatens to turn low-key retention elections into high-stakes political brawls, defeating their original purpose. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The future of merit selection will be shaped by technology and our increasingly polarized society. * **Increased Transparency through Technology:** Technology offers an opportunity to make the commission process more transparent. States are experimenting with broadcasting commission interviews online and creating more robust websites with detailed information about every applicant, allowing for greater public scrutiny. * **The Impact of Social Media:** How should a nominating commission treat an applicant's social media history? The internet provides a new, often unfiltered window into a candidate's temperament and potential biases. Expect more defined standards to emerge for how this information is used in the vetting process. * **Combating Polarization:** The greatest threat to merit selection is the national trend of political polarization, which sees every government function as a battle to be won. The survival of merit selection will depend on the commitment of citizens, lawyers, and political leaders to defend the principle that our courts should be a place of impartial justice, not another political prize. Reforms may focus on strengthening the non-partisan nature of commissions and developing better systems for public education on the role of the judiciary. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[appointive_system]]:** A method where judges are appointed by a political figure, such as a governor or president, often with legislative confirmation. * **[[gubernatorial_appointment]]:** The act of a governor selecting a person to fill a judicial office. * **[[judicial_accountability]]:** The concept that judges should be answerable to the public for their decisions and conduct. * **[[judicial_independence]]:** The principle that judges should be free to decide cases based on the law and facts, without pressure from political or popular influence. * **[[judicial_nominating_commission]]:** A non-partisan or bipartisan panel of lawyers and non-lawyers that recruits, evaluates, and recommends judicial candidates. * **[[missouri_plan]]:** The original and most common form of merit selection, combining a nominating commission, gubernatorial appointment, and retention elections. * **[[nonpartisan_election]]:** An election where candidates for office run without a political party label next to their name on the ballot. * **[[partisan_election]]:** An election where candidates for office run with a political party label (e.g., Democrat, Republican) on the ballot. * **[[retention_election]]:** A "yes" or "no" election where voters decide whether a sitting judge should remain in office for another term. * **[[state_bar_association]]:** A professional organization of all the lawyers licensed to practice law in a particular state. * **[[state_courts]]:** The courts that make up the judicial branch of a state government, handling the vast majority of legal cases in the U.S. * **[[vacancy]]:** An empty or unoccupied position, in this case, on a judicial bench. ===== See Also ===== * [[separation_of_powers]] * [[state_law]] * [[judicial_review]] * [[u.s._constitution]] * [[federal_courts]] * [[due_process]] * [[civil_procedure]]