January 14, 2010
Manchin proposes public financing for Supreme Court elections
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Gov. Joe Manchin and the state Supreme Court hope to shore up public confidence in a West Virginia judicial system that has been scrutinized by the nation's highest court and branded a "hellhole" by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Manchin wants to allow for public financing for the two state Supreme Court elections in 2012, with an eye toward addressing fears that West Virginia justices can be bought by wealthy campaign donors.

The court, meanwhile, plans to release a proposed set of rules by early February aimed to address concerns that the state lacks an effective process for reviewing decisions made by circuit courts.

Both strategies come after years of bad press for the state's courts, which have been criticized by public interest groups and business lobbies.

In the most high profile rebuke, the U.S. Supreme Court last year faulted state Chief Justice Brent Benjamin for failing to remove himself from a multimillion-dollar appeal involving the company of his top 2004 campaign supporter. The court ruled that elected judges must step aside if campaign donations are likely to create the perception of bias.

In his State of the State address Wednesday, Manchin said public financing for Supreme Court justices will eliminate that perception.

"The goal is to relieve judges from the burden of political fundraising and to reduce the potential for appearance of bias as a result of campaign donations," he said.

A draft copy of Manchin's bill says funding will come from new fees from court proceedings and lawyers, the unclaimed property fund administered by the state treasurer, a voluntary donation on income tax forms and other sources.

The bill already has powerful supporters in the Legislature, including Senate Finance Chairman Jeff Kessler, who introduced an unsuccessful public financing bill last year.

"If you ask the judges what the most distasteful part of the campaign is, it's going out and asking for money from people who might come before you in court," the Marshall County Democrat said.

Kessler said he hopes public financing will ultimately expand to include West Virginia's 70 circuit court judges.

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Posted By: Frank (1:18pm 01-16-2010)
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We are paying for it anyway- and a hundred or a thousand fold over. The cost to the public treasury for office holders to satisfy the demands of those whose private $$$$$$$s finance their election campaigns is staggering.

Posted By: Glad2bWV (9:02am 01-15-2010)
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This is the best legislation proposed by any elected officials that I can recall. I say, make all elected positions publicly funded, set spending limits & outlaw TV commercials & force the candidates to come out from behind their "sound bites" etc., & speak directly face to face with the voters!! I bet this legislation sinks like a rock in a lake.

Posted By: MarshallFan (8:41am 01-15-2010)
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Court fees are just another form of taxation. Just like the fees for traffic tickets and other court fees, they are there as a form of revenue. You can call it what you want, it's still a tax. Gotten aticket lately? $159 in court fees alone, plus any fines. This is why you have Summersville and Gauley Bridge set up speed traps to pickup revenue. And this type of funding only kills the Golden Goose (a.k.a. business).

Posted By: jkotcon (7:09am 01-15-2010)
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Penny wise and pound foolish would be an apt description of our current system. The cost to hold an election under the bill would be trivial compared to the costs already being imposed by judges bought and paid for by the corporations, the unions and the trial lawyers. If judges were freed from the chore of fund-raising, and all started on an equal financial footing, then voters could indeed look for the best candidate. But when one individual can spend 3 million dollars to drown out all he competition by shouting "For The Sake Of The Children" and thereby purchase a Judge that saves him 80 million dollars, the whole system fails. The current system is broken, and a fix is certainly needed. And if this works, I think public financing for the Legislative and Executive branches should be next.

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