Georgia's Judicial Elections
Our judicial system is made up of our judges and Courts of law. The judiciary is one of our three branches of government. For our judiciary and government to truly represent us, our judges must rule impartially, based upon equality under the law. Our judges must be accountable to all citizens, not just those citizens, law firms, or corporations that help them get elected.
In Georgia, we elect our judges in non-partisan races, which means that judges are not supposed to be affiliated with any political party or platform. Judges are supposed to be accountable to the people, not political parties. Similarly, judges are not supposed to favor those who contribute to their election campaigns.
In a recent survey, over 75% of respondents indicated that giving money to a judge’s election campaign gave at least the appearance that the judge may not be able to rule fairly. And we need to protect our judges from this face-to-face interaction, where those lawyers and law firms who give them money to win election are, the next week or month, asking the judge to rule in their fav
or.
Our Courts make sure that our banks are honest, our streets are safe, our contracts are fair, and our votes are heard. Any favoritism resulting from campaign fundraising or partisan politics could undermine this one branch of government that we rely on for fairness. The judicial system should not be for sale.
However, a large majority of contributions to judges’ campaigns come from lawyers or law firms, and corporations, who then appear before the judge in Court. While it is wrong to say that judges are necessarily influenced by campaign contributions, at least 25% of judges state that there is actual bias, such that a judge would rule in favor of someone who gave him or her money to get elected.
But the judiciary has an even higher ethical standard. Judges are not even supposed to allow the appearance that they’re
biased. So, judges should recuse themselves, or refuse to judge a case, when a significant campaign contributor appears in their Court. However, it is rare that a judge will do so, and in Georgia, we lack the safeguards that would prevent a judge from ruling that s/he was unbiased, even if s/he was biased.
Take Action Now! Protect Fairness in our Courts!
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