Defending People

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Harris County: A New Equilibrium?

Mur­ray New­man has a run­down of the out­comes of Har­ris County’s crim­i­nal judi­cial elec­tions.

The races were closer than they’ve been since I started prac­tic­ing law and pay­ing atten­tion to judi­cial elec­tions. Where the Repub­li­cans used to sweep and the Democ­rats swept all but one bench in 2008 the Repub­li­cans cap­tured only two thirds of the nine criminal-district (felony) court benches.

I was glad for the Demo­c­ra­tic near-sweep in 2008 because it ended four­teen years of Har­ris County Repub­li­can Party hege­mony. I’m relieved that the results were more bal­anced this time around because we’re not yet see­ing the begin­ning of Har­ris County Demo­c­ra­tic Party hege­mony. (A pox on both their hegemonies.)

The three races in which Democ­rats hung on were the 174th, in which Ruben Guer­rero beat Robert Sum­mer­lin; the 178th, in which David Men­doza beat Roger Bridg­wa­ter; and the 339th, in which Maria Jack­son beat Brad Hart.

Mur­ray calls that last race a “true shocker.” Brad Hart was a good can­di­date. I think Brad might make a good judge. But Maria Jack­son is a good judge.

I learned after the 2008 elec­tion (when I was cam­paign trea­surer for Shawna Rea­gin, who was a tremen­dous dis­ap­point­ment on the bench, and who lost to Stacey Bond yes­ter­day) not to have great expec­ta­tions for new judges. So I’d hate to throw away a per­fectly good judge for the sake of a spec­u­la­tive improvement.

Mean­while, Ruben Guer­rero is a ter­ri­ble judge. I don’t know Robert Sum­mer­lin, but I’ve talked to peo­ple whom I respect who know him and think he would be a bad judge. And while we oughtn’t throw away good judges, we ought to dis­card ter­ri­ble judges on gen­eral prin­ci­ple, even when we don’t know we’re replac­ing them with bet­ter, pour encour­ager les autres.

Jack­son (who is good, but pos­si­bly not the best can­di­date) and Guer­rero (who is bad, but pos­si­bly not the worst can­di­date) both won. I sus­pect that my feel­ings about the 174th mir­ror Murray’s feel­ings about the 339th. 

So. We’ve lost a cou­ple of good judges or can­di­dates, lost a cou­ple of bad judges or can­di­dates, kept a cou­ple of good judges, and acquired (or, in the case of Brock Thomas in the 338th, reac­quired) some new judges with the poten­tial to do a good job. What’s the broader sig­nif­i­cance of the new presidential-election-year bal­ance of polit­i­cal power in Har­ris County?

As long as the bal­ance of power between the Repub­li­can Party and the Demo­c­ra­tic Party in Har­ris County lasts, races will be decided on things other than party affil­i­a­tion, which can be a good thing.

Merit,” for exam­ple, is a thing other than party affil­i­a­tion; if the straight-ticket vot­ers can­cel each other out, we’ll have de facto non­par­ti­san judi­cial elec­tions. In non­par­ti­san judi­cial elec­tions the peo­ple famil­iar with the races and the can­di­dates decide the races and the bet­ter can­di­dates are more likely to win. This pos­si­bil­ity will moti­vate the par­ties to seek out com­pe­tent can­di­dates rather than polit­i­cal hacks. The vot­ers will benefit.

Or maybe not.

More likely, polit­i­cal con­sul­tants will ben­e­fit: Can­di­dates des­per­ate for votes will, like lawyers des­per­ate for busi­ness, throw money at any char­la­tan who talks a good mar­ket­ing game. (I’ve met some of Houston’s polit­i­cal con­sul­tants; they make legal mar­ket­ing huck­sters look hon­est by contrast.)

Mur­ray New­man will ben­e­fit (and I might too): where straight-party vot­ing doesn’t decide the races, the opin­ions of cred­i­ble peo­ple who know the issues will carry more weight. (After I started writ­ing this, I had lunch with Norm, who out of the blue made the same argu­ment: vot­ers who care ask the par­tic­i­pants for their rec­om­men­da­tions. Norm can bring four or five votes; I can bring hun­dreds. Mur­ray can bring thou­sands, but many of them are sock­pup­pets.)

Maybe jus­tice will ben­e­fit. Judges who can no longer count on being reelected just because of the let­ter in paren­the­ses after their name should—and may, and I hope will—start work­ing a lit­tle harder at being fair. I’m not say­ing it’ll cure Judge Bipo­lar or Judge NPD (about whom more in com­ing days), but it might moti­vate them to start tak­ing their meds more regularly.

Here’s another inter­est­ing thing about straight-ticket vot­ers can­celling each other out: it means that third-party can­di­dates might, with­out win­ning, affect the out­comes of county judi­cial elec­tions. A Green Party can­di­date might siphon off votes that would have oth­er­wise gone to the Demo­c­ra­tic can­di­date, and a Lib­er­tar­ian Party can­di­date might do the same for a Repub­li­can can­di­date (not because Repub­li­cans are nec­es­sar­ily more lib­er­tar­ian than Democ­rats, but because Repub­li­cans seem more likely to self-identify as lib­er­tar­ian than Democ­rats). This could add an excit­ing twist to elec­tions that for too long were ho-hum “here come the Repub­li­cans again” affairs.

Speak­ing of which, what about the off-year elec­tions, when the other thir­teen felony courts and fif­teen mis­de­meanor courts are at stake? In 2010 the Repub­li­cans all won with 55–57% of the vote. I expect to see smaller num­bers in 2014, but not the kind of tossups that will make merit a fac­tor. Maybe we’ll be there by 2018.

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

3 Responses to “Harris County: A New Equilibrium?”

  1. Ross says:

    Mark, I was favor­ably impressed with your show­ing in the elec­tion. Run again so I can vote for you again. It would be nice to see some­one with your atti­tude on the bench.

    i gen­er­ally only vote in judi­cial elec­tions where I’ve had time, and the desire, to inves­ti­gate the can­di­dates. Too bad oth­ers don’t do that.

    I also wish the straight ticket option would go away. That’s the same as out­sourc­ing your thinking.

  2. Jay Armijo says:

    SIr, I was sorry to see that you didn’t win, but from what I under­stand there wasn’t much chance that you would. I appre­ci­ate you run­ning though, and I hope to get the chance to vote for you again some­time soon.

  3. Thomas Stephenson says:

    Yep. Up where I prac­tice the judi­cial races are decided in the Repub­li­can pri­mary — Democ­rats don’t even bother run­ning can­di­dates — with often pre­dictable results. Yeah, some­times you get a good judge out of the process (some­thing about blind pigs, truf­fles) but with­out a gen­eral elec­tion com­pet­i­tive between the two par­ties there’s lit­tle accountability.

    And, by the way, as much as some peo­ple com­plain about the two-party sys­tem, the real prob­lem is that in most places it’s a de facto one-party system.

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