Katherine E. McGill Magid

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Kate McGill
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Montgomery County Magisterial District Court 38-1-08
Tenure
Present officeholder
Term ends
2024

Elections and appointments
Last election
November 7, 2017


Kate McGill is a judge on the Montgomery County Magisterial District in Pennsylvania.

Elections

2017

See also: Pennsylvania local trial court judicial elections, 2017

Pennsylvania held local judicial elections on November 7, 2017. A primary election occurred on May 16, 2017. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was March 7, 2017. Candidates and recently appointed judges of the Courts of Common Pleas must initially run in partisan elections. Subsequent terms are won through retention elections. Elections for the Magisterial District Courts are always partisan. Pennsylvania allows cross-filing for candidates running in partisan elections. Most candidates run in both the Democratic and Republican primaries.[1]

Incumbent Katherine E. McGill Magid ran unopposed in the general election. She was unopposed in the Democratic and Republican primaries. [2]

Ballotpedia will publish vote totals here after they become available.
Montgomery County Magisterial District 38-1-08, Primary Election, 2017
Candidate
Green check mark transparent.png Katherine E. McGill Magid Incumbent

2011

See also: Pennsylvania judicial elections, 2011

McGill won the Republican Party primary on May 17. She received 21.7 percent in the Democratic primary and 60.5 percent of the vote in the Republican primary. She defeated Michael Kolodner and Shawn P. Markey in the general election, winning 52.73 percent of the vote.[3][4]

Selection method

See also: Partisan election of judges

Judges of the Pennsylvania Magisterial Districts are selected in partisan elections. They serve six-year terms. After their initial term, magistrates must run for new terms in contested races.[5][6]

Qualifications
A judge must be:

  • a local resident for at least one year;[6]
  • a state bar member;*
  • no younger than 21; and
  • no older than 75.

*Magisterial district judges may alternatively pass a training course to sidestep the bar member requirement.[6]

See also

External links

Footnotes