It’s the 12 Days of Ballotpedia! Your gift powers the trusted, unbiased information voters need heading into 2026. Donate now!

Charlene Charlet Day

From Ballotpedia
Revision as of 17:26, 10 November 2025 by MW-MassReplace (contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Charlene Charlet Day
East Baton Rouge Parish Family Court Section 2 Division C
Tenure
2011 - Present
Term ends
2026
Years in position
14

Elections and appointments
Last election
November 3, 2020
Education
Bachelor's
Louisiana State University, 1974
Law
Louisiana State University, 1994
Graduate
Louisiana State University, 1980

Charlene Charlet Day is a judge for Section 2, Division C of the East Baton Rouge Parish Family Court in Louisiana. She assumed office in 2011. Her current term ends on December 31, 2026.

Day (Republican Party) won re-election for the Section 2, Division C judge of the East Baton Rouge Parish Family Court in Louisiana outright in the primary on November 3, 2020, after the primary and general election were canceled.

Education

Day attended Louisiana State University for her bachelor's, master's and law degrees. She received a B.S. in elementary education in 1974, a Master's of Education in supervision and administration in 1980, and a J.D. in 1994.[1]

Career

Prior to her judicial election, Day was an attorney in private practice at the firm Myles, Cook & Day. Prior to her law career, she taught English and social studies at a middle school in Zachary, La., and taught fourth grade in Clinton, La.[1]

Awards and associations

Day has been involved in the following associations:

  • Fellow, Louisiana Bar Foundation
  • Board of directors, Louisiana Chapter of the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts
  • Member, Wex S. Malone American Inn of Court
  • Legislative committee member, Louisiana Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges[1]

Elections

2020

See also: City elections in Baton Rouge, Louisiana (2020)


Louisiana elections use the majority-vote system. All candidates compete in the same primary, and a candidate can win the election outright by receiving more than 50 percent of the vote. If no candidate does, the top two vote recipients from the primary advance to the general election, regardless of their partisan affiliation.

Nonpartisan primary election

The primary election was canceled. Charlene Charlet Day (R) won the election without appearing on the ballot.

2011

See also: Louisiana judicial elections, 2011

Day narrowly defeated Hunter Greene on April 2, 2011, winning 51 percent of the vote.[2][3]

Campaign themes

2020

Ballotpedia survey responses

See also: Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection

Charlene Charlet Day did not complete Ballotpedia's 2020 Candidate Connection survey.

See also


External links

Footnotes