An issue currently rising to the top in Juneau
Why is Lady Justice’s blindfold slipping in Alaska?
And what can we do about it?
We all want our judges to be honest, fair, intelligent, and experienced persons who uphold the constitution and the law without bias. Although some individual judges in our state meet this description, why are an increasing number of Alaskans concerned about our judicial branch? Is Lady Justice’s blindfold slipping? Are her scales no longer balanced?
The people’s concern is not without reason. Alaskans have observed how the process of our Judicial Merit Selection System prescribed in our Alaska State Constitution has become more and more political as each year passes. Because the Judicial Council (which determines the small list of worthy applicants for judgeships) is dominated by attorneys, too much power and influence over one-third of our government rests on one profession, one tiny sliver of the people in Alaska.
The reason for the slipping blindfold and tipping scales is twofold: 1) the process bestows tremendous power on a small, elite group, and 2) politics have entered the arena and have gained equal footing with merit in the selection of applicants, and arguably, many would say, have overtaken it.
Some recognized years ago that because of the first point, the second point was likely inevitable and would make the process untenable and inappropriate. The first problem was bound to breed the second. That is what has happened. Let’s consider the first.
Advisors at Alaska’s constitutional convention more than six decades ago warned delegates about the first point. They informed those working on “Article IV – The Judiciary” that the version of the Missouri Plan (judicial merit selection) under consideration for inclusion in our state constitution went too far.
As reported in the book Alaska’s Constitutional Convention by Vic Fisher (a delegate to the convention), the Judiciary Committee consultants wrote, “No state constitution has ever gone this far in placing one of the three branches of the government beyond the reach of democratic controls. We feel that in its desire to preserve the integrity of the courts, the convention has gone farther than is necessary or safe in putting them in the hands of a private professional group, however, public-spirited its members may be.”
It certainly is important to consider the merit of a candidate, but it must be considered in a process fitting for a constitutional republic, fitting for a representative democracy, a process reflective of “we the people.”
Just as the executive and legislative branches are to be of, for, and by the people, so should the judicial branch be of, for, and by the people.
According to James Bopp, Jr. in his speech before the Robert H. McKinley School of Law, “Merit selection is inherently perilous to a well-functioning democracy and is fundamentally illegitimate because it permits groups of selected elites, not the People, to choose our policy makers, i.e., judges.”[1]
The make-up of our judiciary should not be determined by an elite few. Our judicial branch is to be representative of, work for, and be structured by the people of Alaska. Alaska’s currently is not.
When the narrowing down of the applicant pool for judge selection is dominated by a professional association of lawyers, the power concentrated on attorneys, the second problem is ripe for the picking: the entrance of the politics of that small segment of society into the arena. When it happens to the degree that it sways outcomes in a certain way – repeatedly – the public begins to take notice. That is what is happening in Alaska.
Let’s initially agree that as humans, none of us can escape being political. At its roots, politics is about being a citizen, a resident, a person who relates to their surrounding world, and at its most fundamental level, involves a person strategizing how to survive, navigate and achieve.
With this as a basis, we can conclude that every member of the Judicial Council is political, each one with a place on the political spectrum. With this knowledge in hand, we next must think about the attorney members on the Council. Each is human and not immune from a political persuasion. From the very far left (very liberal) to the far right (very conservative), each attorney tends to some area of that political range.
When our state constitution was being written (1955-1956) and at statehood in 1959, as it turns out, more attorneys considered themselves to be right-of-center. Sen Maya,[2] one of three authors of “The Political Ideologies of American Lawyers”, stated in an interview in August of 2021, “[T]he legal profession now leans quite a bit to the left, particularly among elite law school graduates, but that really wasn’t the case historically. And historically the legal profession was actually very conservative. Coming through the mid part of the 20th century, it was very conservative.” She continued, “[the law profession] used to be a conservative profession and now it’s actually a fairly liberal one and increasingly so.”[3]
Because the ideological leanings of attorneys have shifted leftward since statehood, the judicial selection process has also followed suit.
As all humans are political to one degree or another and as attorneys are particularly interested in decision-making in courtrooms due to their livelihoods, Professor Brian T. Fitzpatrick of Vanderbilt University has concluded that not only are politics without doubt part of judicial selection in Missouri Plan states, but that the politics at play would naturally correlate with those of the bar association in that state.
In addition to recognizing that the political persuasions of attorneys have shifted to the left since the 1950’s and that politics have saddled up alongside merit as a factor in judicial selection by small groups dominated by attorneys, research regarding the ideologies of attorneys in the 50 states reveals startling information about Alaska.
First, here is a visual of the overall distribution of American lawyers’ ideology in all 50 states[5].
The graph shows clearly that the majority of attorneys in the United State are left-of-center.
What about Alaska? How does it compare to the other states? How does it compare to the nation overall when it comes to the ideologies of attorneys?
Below is the scoring visually by state as of 2016[6]. A cursory review of Alaska’s graph below with the previous visual show us that a larger proportion of Alaska’s attorneys are left-of-center than we find nationally. A quick glance at all 50 states illustrates Alaska’s attorneys tend to the left more so than a number of other states. Noting the clusters and heights of the columns for states such as Arizona, Ohio, and West Virginia, we can conclude that the bar association in our state tips to the left much more so than the associations in the three aforementioned states.
Now to bring our two points together: the concentration of power on an elite few and politics. According to an article in USAToday, G. Alan Tarr joins Fitzpatrick to not only point out the politics evident in judicial merit selection systems controlled by the legal profession, but how this is then intertwined with our first point – the lack of accountability to the people that should be a factor in our American form of government.
To bring this discussion full circle and back to Alaska, let us consider the recent testimony of former Lt. Governor Loren Leman before the Senate State Affairs Committee in Juneau on February 23, 2023. He testified that during his time in the Alaska State House (1989-1992), a Democrat in House leadership shared with him his thoughts that although Republicans likely at some point would control the majority in the legislature and the governorship, that the Democrats would always control the judiciary. This Democrat leader was perceptive. He understood that more attorneys held liberal ideologies than conservative ones in Alaska, that the bar association reflected this same tendency, and that together this meant that the judicial merit system in Alaska favored left-leaning judges.
That was thirty-plus years ago. The situation is more pronounced today than it was then.
My concerns regarding the judge selection process are one of several reasons I supported convening a constitutional convention on last November’s ballot. Although that effort failed – as have past attempts over the years in the legislature to change the constitution to add the accountability-of-the-people factor into the process – recent discussion has begun in the Capitol building regarding the selection process of judicial officers within our state.
Senator. Mike Shower has sponsored SB 31 and Representative George Rauscher has sponsored HB 82 related to this very issue.
It turns out that the selection process in the constitution is required only for supreme and superior court judges. The bills alter the selection process for district, appellate, and magistrate judges by adding “we the people” elements to make the process more fitting for a republic and to put a check-and-balance on the political influence of the Alaska Bar Association. The bills allow the governor to add names to the selection list along with the names submitted by the Judicial Council; district, appellate, and magistrate judge nominees would then require a confirmation vote by the legislature.
I encourage you to follow SB 31 and HB 82 and provide public testimony during committee hearings as they become known. Email legislators to express your support. At this point, because there is not the required two-thirds support in the legislature to put a constitutional amendment before the voters to change our judicial selection process, our best way to begin to diminish the politics and power of an elite group that have crept into our courts is to advance the Shower/Rauscher legislation. We must work together, not to dismiss the merit of judicial candidates, but to realign our judicial branch to be representative of, work for, and be structured by the people of Alaska.
*Edited March 9, 2023 to correct House Bill number.
[1] Bopp, Jr., J. (2012, April 5). The Perils of Merit Selection. Introduction, page 1. IU Robert H. McKinley School of Law, Indiana Law Review.
https://mckinneylaw.iu.edu/ilr/pdfa/vol46p87.pdf accessed February 26, 2023. Note: The Article was adapted from a speech given by the author at the Indiana Law Review’s Symposium, “Reflecting on Forty Years of Merit Selection,” at the Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in Indianapolis on April 5, 2012.
[2] Bonica, A., Chilton, A.S., Sen, M. The Political Ideologies of American Lawyers (2015, October 13). Journal of Legal Analysis, Volume 8, Issue 2, Winter 2016, Pages 277–335. https://doi.org/10.1093/jla/lav011 accessed February 26, 2023.
[3] Grossman, M. (Host). (2021, August 25) Why Lawyers Rule American Politics; Study “The Judicial Tug of War” [Online Broadcast] Niskanen Center (Producer), The Science of Politics. TRANSCRIPThttps://www.niskanencenter.org/why-lawyers-rule-american-politics/ accessed February 26, 2023.
[4] Fitzpatrick, B.T. (2000). The Politics of Merit Selection, Missouri Law Review 2009, page 675. https://scholarship.law.vanderbilt.edu/faculty-publications/584/ accessed February 26, 2023.
[5] Bonica, A., Chilton, A.S., Sen, M. (2015, October 13) The Political Ideologies of American Lawyers Journal of Legal Analysis, Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 277–335. https://doi.org/10.1093/jla/lav011 accessed February 26, 2023.
[6] Bonica, A., Chilton, A.S., Sen, M. (2015, October 13) The Political Ideologies of American Lawyers Journal of Legal Analysis, Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 277–335. https://doi.org/10.1093/jla/lav011 accessed February 26, 2023.
[7] Tarr, G.A. (2013, March 29). Judicial Selection Should Return to Its Roots. USA Today. https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2013/03/29/judges-states-missouri/2028705/ accessed February 26, 2023.