Your feedback ensures we stay focused on the facts that matter to you most—take our survey.

Robert A. Glusman

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.
Robert A. Glusman

Silhouette Placeholder Image.png

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


Superior Court of Butte County
Tenure
Present officeholder
Term ends

2023

Elections and appointments
Last elected

November 8, 2016

Education

Bachelor's

University of California, Santa Barbara

Law

University of Santa Clara


Robert A. Glusman is a judge for the Superior Court of Butte County in California. He was appointed by Gov. Gray Davis (D) in 2002. Glusman won re-election unopposed in 2010 and 2016.[1][2]

Elections

2016

See also: California local trial court judicial elections, 2016

California held general elections for local judicial offices on November 8, 2016. There was a primary on June 7, 2016. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was March 31, 2016. A total of 351 seats were up for election. Incumbent Robert A. Glusman ran unopposed in the election for Department 10 of the Butte County Superior Court.[3]

Butte County Superior Court Judge, Department 10, 2016
Candidate
Green check mark transparent.png Robert A. Glusman Incumbent

Selection method

See also: Nonpartisan election

The 1,535 judges of the California Superior Courts compete in nonpartisan races in even-numbered years. If a candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote in the June primary election, he or she is declared the winner; if no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the vote, a runoff between the top two candidates is held during the November general election.[4][5][6][7]

If an incumbent judge is running unopposed in an election, his or her name does not appear on the ballot. The judge is automatically re-elected following the general election.[4]

The chief judge of any given superior court is selected by peer vote of the court's members. He or she serves in that capacity for one or two years, depending on the county.[4]

Qualifications
Candidates are required to have 10 years of experience as a law practitioner or as a judge of a court of record.[4]

Education

Glusman received a bachelor's degree from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1972. He received a J.D. from the University of Santa Clara in 1976.[2]

Career

Awards and associations

  • 2013-2014: President, California Judges Association[2]

See also

External links

Footnotes