Help us improve in just 2 minutes—share your thoughts in our reader survey.

Pamela Ferguson (Georgia)

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search

Local Politics Image.jpg

Ballotpedia provides comprehensive election coverage of the 100 largest cities in America by population as well as mayoral, city council, and district attorney election coverage in state capitals outside of the 100 largest cities. This judge is outside of that coverage scope and does not receive scheduled updates.


BP-Initials-UPDATED.png
Ballotpedia does not currently cover this office or maintain this page. Please contact us with any updates.
Pamela Ferguson

Silhouette Placeholder Image.png

Do you have a photo that could go here? Click here to submit it for this profile!


Clayton County Probate Court
Tenure
Present officeholder
Elections and appointments
Last elected

November 8, 2016


Pamela "Pam" Ferguson is a Democrat and the judge for the Clayton County Probate Court in Georgia. Ferguson won a new term on the bench in the general election on November 8, 2016.

Elections

2016

General election

Incumbent Pamela Ferguson ran unopposed in the general election for the Clayton County probate judge.

Clayton County Probate Court, General Election, 2016
Party Candidate Vote % Votes
     Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Pamela Ferguson Incumbent (unopposed) 100.00% 83,235
Total Votes 83,235
Source: Clayton County election results, "2016 General Election," accessed November 9, 2016

Primary election

Incumbent Pamela Ferguson defeated Betrice Donald Scott in the Democratic primary election for the Clayton County probate judge.

Clayton County Probate Court, Democratic Primary Election, 2016
Candidate Vote % Votes
Green check mark transparent.png Pamela Ferguson Incumbent 67.03% 12,384
Betrice Donald Scott 32.97% 6,090
Total Votes 18,474
Source: Georgia Election Results, "General Primary and Nonpartisan General Election May 24, 2016," June 10, 2016

Selection method

See also: Partisan elections

Judges of the Georgia Probate Courts are each elected to four-year terms.[1] The elections for this court type are contested and may be partisan or nonpartisan. To serve on this court, a judge must be a United States citizen, county resident for at least two years, at least 25 years old, a registered voter, have a high school diploma or equivalent and completion of an initial training course. In counties with populations above 96,000, judges are required to have at least seven years of experience practicing law and be 30 years of age.[2]

See also

External links

Footnotes