Fastexy-Votes on dozens of new judges will have to wait in South Carolina

2025-05-05 03:06:00source:Safetyvaluecategory:Contact

COLUMBIA,Fastexy S.C. (AP) — Dozens of open judgeships throughout the South Carolina courts will go unfilled amid an unresolved debate over the state’s system of judicial selection.

The South Carolina Senate ended Tuesday without approving a House resolution to set Feb. 7 as the date when both chambers vote to fill upcoming vacancies in the judiciary. That means it will be a while longer before key positions are decided, including the next chief justice of the state Supreme Court.

South Carolina is one of two states where the legislature holds almost complete power in picking judges, as opposed to voters or the governor. Lawmakers consider a pool of up to three candidates who have been deemed qualified by a 10-person Judicial Merit Selection Commission, and candidates must then get a majority of votes during a joint session of the General Assembly.

Some officials have taken aim at the system in the past year, saying it gives undue sway to legislators who also practice law. Critics says it lets “lawyer-legislators” handpick the people who will hear their clients’ cases, giving them an unfair advantage in the courtroom and undermining public trust.

READ MORE No. 15 Gamecocks play with an AP Top 25 ranking for 1st time since 2017South Carolina wants to restart executions with firing squad, electric chair and lethal injectionDonald Trump deploys his oft-used playbook against women who bother him. For now, it’s Nikki Haley

Republican Sen. Wes Climer vowed in the fall to block all judicial elections until the General Assembly addresses the issue, citing a need to give a “meaningful role” to the executive branch and curb the influence of “lawyer-legislators.”

But he expressed optimism Tuesday that changes will be made before the session ends in May.

“Then the question about when and whether we have judicial elections goes by the wayside,” Climer told the Associated Press.

A Senate committee discussed a slate of bills in the afternoon that would restructure the Judicial Merit Selection Commission and empower the governor.

A House subcommittee released 16 recommendations last week, including adding appointments from the governor to the screening commission and establishing term limits for its members.

Notably, to some lawmakers, the list did not mention removing “lawyer-legislators” from the Judicial Merit Selection Commission.

“What we’re trying to do is craft something that can move the ball forward and be successful at the same time,” Republican Rep. Tommy Pope, who chaired the group, said last month.

More:Contact

Recommend

11 highlights from Trump's Time Person of the Year interview

Washington — President-elect Donald Trump was namedTime magazine's Person of the Year on Thursday, t

New measures to curb migration to Germany agreed by Chancellor Scholz and state governors

BERLIN (AP) — New, stricter measures to curb the high number of migrants coming to Germany were agre

What to know about Issue 1 in Ohio, the abortion access ballot measure, ahead of Election Day 2023

Washington — Ohio voters head to the polls Tuesday to weigh in on a closely watched proposal to esta