"JNC Reform is Timely"
State Representative Johnnie Byrd
President Bush has ended the American Bar
Associations (ABA) nearly half-century role as a screening
panel for federal judicial nominees. President Bush said:
"It would be particularly inappropriate to grant the
politically active ABA a preferential, quasi-official role in
the selection process." I commend President Bush on his
stand.
In the same vein, the Florida House of Representatives
recently passed House
Bill 367 removing the preferential role of the Florida Bar in the
selection of Floridas state court judges.
Because nominating and appointing judges
has been a rather closed-door process, some Floridians may not even be
aware of how judges are currently selected. Heres how it works. All
appellate and some trial judges are chosen by a system of nomination and
appointment. Nomination of judges in made exclusively by constitutionally
created bodies known as Judicial Nominating Commissions (JNC). Attorneys
who wish to become judges must be interviewed and recommended by the JNC.
Each JNC consists of nine members, three of whom are appointed by the
Florida Bar, three by the Governor, and three appointed by the other six.
When there is a judicial opening, the JNC sends a list of between three
and six nominees to the Governor, and the Governor must select from that
list. The Governor makes final appointment. Thus, under Florida law, the
Florida Bar not only has persuasive input, but has binding, legal, control
over who is nominated to become a judge.
Arguably, the thirty-year-old JNC system
was a well-intentioned effort to take "politics" out of the
process. The Bar defends its role the JNC process under the banner of
protecting the "independence of the judiciary". This is a
stretch, and the Bar knows it. Everyone agrees that the judiciary should
be completely independent of outside influences on the decisions a Court
makes. No one doubts this to be the case in Florida. Nonetheless, to argue
that the "independence of the judiciary" also removes the voters
and their elected officials from deciding who becomes a judge has no basis
in democratic principle. The elitist notion that only lawyers are
competent to pick judges has not stood the test of time.
Writing from retirement in 1816, Thomas
Jefferson observed that state court judges are most accountable when
elected, "It has been thought that the people are not competent
electors of judges learned in the law. But I do not know that this is
true, and if doubtful, we should follow principle [popular election of
judges]." Jefferson reasoned that the "incessant
responsibility" of standing for election by the body politic created
the appropriate accountability for a state judiciary. As you see,
accountability of the judiciary has been an elusive goal from the
inception of our experiment with democracy.
While serving as the Chairman of the
Judiciary Committee for two years, I closely examined the JNC process and
was struck by how much power the people of Florida have ceded to the
Florida Bar. In fact, I was surprised at how politically active the
Florida Bar was in the legislative process in general.
Members of the Florida Bar are not elected
by the people of Florida, and therefore are not accountable to the people.
They represent a distinct special interest.
Just as the ABA has been politically
active, so too, has the Florida Bar. The Florida Bar has an agenda. Like
the ABA, the Florida Bar claims to be non-partisan, yet the Florida Bar
has appointed more than twice as many Democrats as Republicans to the
present Circuit Court JNC. Thats 60% to 25%--hardly a balanced number.
Finally, the sadly unfortunate truth is
that the JNC process has gained a reputation for nominating judges based
on politics, rather than the qualifications of the applicants. The fact
is, in other professions such as medicine, nursing, and real estate, it is
the Governor who determines who will serve on their professional boards.
The Florida Bar, when selecting nominees, has a vested interest. They will
be trying their cases in front of these judges.
In an effort to directly address judicial
accountability, House
Bill 367 returns to the Governor the power to select all nine members
of the JNC. Five members of the JNC must be members of the Florida Bar,
and four of the members must be non-lawyers. The bill also requires that
the Governor seek to ensure that the appointments reflect the racial,
ethnic, and gender diversity of the population of the courts
territorial jurisdiction. The Governor is accountable to the people of
Florida. This is an upgrade to the system of selection of Floridas
state court judges.
Winston Churchill once said: "To
improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often." While we
have outstanding judges, our selection process needs to be closer to the
people. The old method of selecting judges has been tried for 30 years,
and we are now seeing its shortcomings.
We all understand that politics plays a
role in all groups, large and small. House Bill 367 takes the politics of
selecting judges out of the politics of the Florida Bar, and instead,
places that responsibility into the hands of the governor who is
accountable to the people of Florida every four years. It is time to move
from a closed door political process, to an open and accountable one.
You can contact Rep.
Byrd at:
Capitol Office:
Room 418 The Capitol, 402 S. Monroe St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-1300
Phone (850)488-0807
District Office 1:
Suite 202, 121 North Collins Street
P.O. Drawer E
Plant City, FL
33564-9055
(813)752-5863
(813)757-9108
(813)757-9110
SUNCOM: 512-0915
SUNCOM: 512-0913
District Office 2:
P.O. Box 3823
Brandon, FL
33509-3823
(813)684-0969