Mississippi judicial elections, 2012
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| Judicial Elections |
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| Judicial elections, 2012 |
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The Mississippi judicial elections consisted of the general election on November 6, 2012.
Mississippi judicial elections summary, 2012 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Supreme Court
| Candidate | Incumbency | Office | Election Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Earle Banks | |||
| Josiah Coleman | No | District 3, Position 3 | 58% |
| Leslie King | Yes | District 1, Position 2 | 100% |
| Mike Randolph | Yes | District 2, Position 3 | 77% |
| Richard T. Phillips | No | District 3, Position 3 | 42% |
| Talmadge Braddock | No | District 2, Position 3 | 23% |
| William Waller | Yes | District 1, Position 1 | 55% |
Court of Appeals
| Candidate | Incumbency | Office | Election Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ceola James | No | District 2, Position 2 | 63% |
| Ermea Russell | Yes | District 2, Position 2 | 37% |
| Eugene Fair | Yes | District 5, Position 1 | |
Chancery Court
| Candidate | Incumbency | Office | Election Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ronald Doleac | Yes | |
In the news
Haley appointee removed from court
As featured in JP Election Brief: Highlights of the 2012 judicial elections on November 15, 2012
Ceola James defeated incumbent Ermea Russell for a seat on the Mississippi Court of Appeals. James won with 63% of the vote. Russell, who was originally appointed to the seat by Gov. Haley Barbour in May 2011, received 37% of the vote. James will take office in January 2013.
Mississippi Supreme Court race
As featured in JP Election Brief: The Supreme Court Special on October 18, 2012.
Mississippi's Supreme Court has nine justices. The 2012 election features 3 contested races. Two of these races feature an incumbent facing a challenger. The other features two candidates vying for the seat of a retiring justice. The final race for the Mississippi Supreme Court is an unopposed incumbent.
The nonpartisan race to fill retiring Justice George Carlson's seat on the Supreme Court is a race between Richard "Flip" Phillips, a veteran Mississippi attorney with over 40 years in practice. His opponent, attorney Josiah Coleman, at 39 years old, would be the youngest justice to serve on the state's Supreme Court, if elected. As of August, Phillips had raised nearly $100,000 more than Coleman to fund his campaign.[1]
Candidate's views
| “ | Judges should not act to make public policy as though they were members of the legislative branch of our government. Rather, they should work hard to understand and respect the law and apply it fairly to the facts of the cases before them. Judges should demand the same respect for the law from themselves as they expect from the attorneys and parties who appear before them.[2] -Josiah Coleman[3] |
” |
Mississippi Supreme Court races
As featured in JP Election Brief: Retentions, retirements and ratings on September 20, 2012.
Mississippi: The race to replace retiring Mississippi Supreme Court Justice George Carlson is on, featuring 39-year-old attorney Josiah Coleman, son of a federal judge and governor, against veteran lawyer Richard "Flip" Phillips.
Coleman has received an endorsement from the Mississippi Business and Industry Political Education Committee. He was working for the law firm of Hickman, Goza and Spragins. If elected, he would be the youngest justice to serve on the state's Supreme Court.
Phillips has spent 40 years as an attorney and was working in Batesville. As of July, he had raised approximately $145,000 for his campaign.[1]
In their own words:
Coleman has stated,
| “ | Judges should not act to make public policy as though they were members of the legislative branch; they should fairly interpret our current laws.[1][3] | ” |
Phillips stated,
| “ | I want us to keep the Mississippi Supreme Court with those who have a wide range of experience, qualifications and maturity.[1][3] | ” |
Judge removed from Mississippi Court of Appeals race for living in the wrong district
As featured in JP Election Brief: Judges seeking retention are judged on September 13, 2012.
Jackson attorney Latrice Westbrooks was removed from the Mississippi Court of Appeals race on Sept. 10 by the Mississippi Board of Election Commissioners. In a unanimous decision, the commissioners decided that since Westbrooks didn't live in District 2, she couldn't run for office for judge of that district.
Westbrooks said that she lives seven-tenths of a mile outside of the district, and that state law does not require candidates to live in the districts in which they seek office. Westbrooks's law office is located in District 2.
Lance Stevens, the attorney who represented Westbrooks before the election commissioners, plans to file an appeal of the decision with the 5th Chancery Court. If the appeal succeeds, Westbrooks will compete against Ceola James and incumbent judge Ermea Russell in November.[4]
Nonpartisan judicial races receive partisan backing in Mississippi
As featured in JP Election Brief: High court races setting the tone on August 23, 2012.
Judicial elections in Mississippi, like the one coming up this November, are nonpartisan. Candidates are not nominated by any political party, nor are they allowed to state how they would rule on particular issues if elected. However, political parties and special interest groups are still active in judicial elections.
Recently, the Mississippi Republican Party released a list of the judicial candidates they endorsed.[5]
A 1999 law banned political parties from giving money to judicial candidates. This law was in effect until late 2002, when U.S. District Judge Henry Wingate struck it down as unconstitutional.[6]
Mississippi Supreme Court races set
As featured in JP Election Brief: Focus on the Gulf States and Northwest on May 17, 2012.
A final candidate joined the Mississippi Supreme Court races on Friday, which was the candidate qualifying deadline. Rep. Earle Banks, a member of the Mississippi House of Representatives since 1992, is running against Chief Justice William Waller. The two will face-off in the general election on Nov. 6.
Banks stated, "For far too long, our Supreme Court has acted as if its sole purpose is to protect big corporations and out-of-state interests…I am entering this race because I want to be part of a judicial system that treats every Mississippian with fairness and dignity."[7]
Waller, who was first elected to the Supreme Court in 1996, hopes voters will take note of his experience. He responded to Banks's statement, saying, "I think that we have an excellent court, and I think that our court treats every Mississippian with fairness and dignity."[7]
There are two other contested races for the high court in Mississippi in 2012. Josiah Dennis Coleman will compete against Richard T. Phillips to replace retiring Justice George Carlson. Also, incumbent Judge Mike Randolph faces a challenger in Talmadge Braddock.
See also
External links
- Mississippi 2012 General Election Sample Ballot
- Mississippi Secretary of State: Mississippi Election Chart 2000 - 2012
- MS Litigation Review (blog), "Supreme Court Election Heats Up--Not," September 14, 2012
Footnotes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Clarion Ledger, "Coleman, Phillips in hotly contested judicial race," September 13, 2012
- ↑ Information submitted to Judgepedia by Coleman's campaign via email on 10/2/2012
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
- ↑ The Republic, "Jackson attorney says she'll challenge board's decision to remove her from Appeals Court race," September 10, 2012
- ↑ Mississippi Free Press, "Republicans Endorse 3 for Miss. Supreme Court," August 8, 2012
- ↑ The Commercial Appeal, "News Analysis: Nonpartisan judicial elections not exactly nonpartisan in Mississippi," August 20, 2012
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Clarion Ledger, "Banks running for court," May 11, 2012
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Federal courts:
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals • U.S. District Court: Northern District of Mississippi, Southern District of Mississippi • U.S. Bankruptcy Court: Northern District of Mississippi, Southern District of Mississippi
State courts:
Mississippi Supreme Court • Mississippi Court of Appeals • Mississippi circuit courts • Mississippi Chancery Court • Mississippi county courts • Mississippi justice courts • Mississippi youth courts • Mississippi Municipal Courts
State resources:
Courts in Mississippi • Mississippi judicial elections • Judicial selection in Mississippi