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The following is an article written by Dade County Circuit Judge
Scott J. Silverman and published in The Miami Herald. The Dade County Bar
Association voted (12-11) to endorse the merit selection and retention proposal. While the
Conference has not taken a position on this issue, the Courier solicits viewpoints
on both sides of the issue for publishing in the next issue. Please submit your comments
to Courier editor, Peggy Gehl, fax no. (954) 831-8546, or mail to 201 SE 6th
Street, Room 335, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301. Scott J. Silverman, a Circuit Court judge in Miami-Dade
County, is chairman of the Florida Bars Committee on the Rules of Judicial
Administration.
Our legal system is based on the principle
that an independent, fair and competent judiciary will interpret and apply the laws that
govern us. The role of the judiciary is central to American concepts of justice and the
rule of law.
Preamble to the
Florida
Code of Judicial Conduct, 1999
Voters soon will
reevaluate the manner in which trial judges are selected. In 1998 Miami-Dade County
voters, by nearly 66 percent, agreed to amend the Florida Constitution and give next
years voters an opportunity to establish a system that selects trial judges based on
their proven merit and qualifications. When those judges terms expire, voters then
would say whether the judges should be retained.
Currently trial judges may be either elected or appointed by the
governor from a list candidates screened by an independent judicial-nominating commission.
In either case, trial judges stand for election at the end of their terms.
Though I am a product of the elective system, I am nevertheless
firmly convinced that the public, the judicial system and the administration of justice
are best served by adopting a system of merit selection and retention for trial judges.
Floridas plan of merit selection and retention for
appellate judges has been in place since 1976 and, according to the Florida Bar, has
produced appellate judges whose Bar poll-approval ratings have averaged 87 percent since
1978.
Thirty-four states have adopted merit-selection plans. Notably,
not one of those states has ever chosen to return to contested judicial elections.
Merit selection and retention have significant benefits over
contested judicial elections. It will provide a better qualified judiciary; hold each
judge publicly accountable through a retention vote; end contested judicial elections;
eliminate judicial-campaign fundraising, except under the rarest of circumstances; and
broaden judicial independence.
Contested judicial elections focus primarily on a
candidates name recognition and ability to raise campaign funds. Qualifications are
less important than what a name implies as to gender, religious, cultural, racial and
ethnic identities.
Last year in Miami-Dade County more than $5 million was
contributed and loaned to judicial campaigns. The money was derived mostly from people
within the legal profession, including the candidates themselves.
Donations to judicial campaigns clearly erode confidence in our
courts. While most attorneys contribute because they want competent judges, a 1998 survey
showed that 83 percent of the public thought that campaign contributions strongly or
somewhat influence judges decisions.
Under a merit plan, the governor would appoint all trial judges
from a list of nominees submitted by an independent judicial-nominating commission made up
of both lawyers and lay people. The commission would investigate and select the best
candidates based upon character, legal skills, qualifications, managerial capabilities and
references.
Merit-selection to date has given our county a more-diverse
judiciary. For example, 75 percent of all African-American judges in Miami-Dades
trial courts reached the bench through merit selection.
Opponents to the merit plan frequently suggest that it eliminates
the right to vote. Yet in 1996, only 16 percent of the Circuit Court judges whose terms
expired faced contested reelection; in 1998 only 39 percent. If a merit plan is adopted,
voters rights will expand, because the public will vote on whether to dismiss or
retain all judges whose terms are expiring 100 percent.
Miami-Dade County deserves to have the best and most qualified
trial judges. A merit system will serve that end. |