SC

The Race For SC Chief Justice Is On …

LET THE GAMES BEGIN …  || By FITSNEWS || On the one-year anniversary of arguably the most corrupt judicial election in South Carolina history, lawmakers in the Palmetto State are preparing for the “next round.” S.C. Supreme Court chief justice Jean Toal – reelected in last year’s shadiness – must retire…

LET THE GAMES BEGIN … 

|| By FITSNEWS || On the one-year anniversary of arguably the most corrupt judicial election in South Carolina history, lawmakers in the Palmetto State are preparing for the “next round.”

S.C. Supreme Court chief justice Jean Toal – reelected in last year’s shadiness – must retire at the end of this year due to the state’s 72-year-old retirement threshold.  That means a new chief justice must be elected to fill the remaining nine years on her term.

This week, the state’s Judicial Merit Selection Commission confirmed “a vacancy will exist in the office currently held by (Toal) … upon (her) retirement on or before December 31, 2015.”

“(A) successor will fill the unexpired term of that office,” which runs through July 31, 2024.

The commission will accept applications for this unexpired term through 12:00 p.m. EDT on March 9, 2015 – with an election to be held in May.

Of course that’s where certainty ends …

Numerous “wild cards” – and all sorts of corrupt deal-making – will factor into the process moving forward.

The first “wild card?”  The status of associate Supreme Court justice Costa Pleicones, who unsuccessfully challenged Toal in last year’s legislative election.  If Pleicones runs again – as he appears inclined to do – he would likely be the frontrunner (more on that in a moment).

Were he to prevail, though, he would hit the 72-year-old retirement threshold in 2016 – which would set up another election for the remaining eight years on Toal’s term.

That’s where the second wild card – associate Supreme Court justice Donald Beatty – comes into play.

DONALD BEATTY
DONALD BEATTY

As this website has previously reported, Beatty is eager to accept a federal judgeship – and the administration of U.S. president Barack Obama is eager to give it to him.

The only problem?  U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham is holding up the deal – demanding that the other federal district court vacancy in South Carolina go to Spartanburg, S.C. attorney Donald C. Coggins.

So far there’s been no deal on Coggins, so Beatty’s ascension to the federal bench remains in limbo …

That’s apparently just fine with the S.C. Legislative Black Caucus – which wants Beatty to stay where he is so he can become South Carolina’s second-ever black chief justice.  That’s why caucus members are aggressively pushing the candidacy of Pleicones – knowing that if he wins this year’s election, Beatty would be next in line for the chief justice position from a seniority standpoint.

Were Beatty to bolt, the next in line would be associate justice John Kittredge – who is widely viewed as the most (and really the only) conservative member of the court.

Another wild card?  John C. Few – the chief judge of the S.C. Court of Appeals, the state’s second-highest judicial panel.

According to our sources, Few sees his window of opportunity closing and is likely to make a play for the seat he’s always coveted.  Of course there is rampant speculation that personal issues from a failed 2009 candidacy could derail Few’s bid before it begins.

We’ll have to wait and see how that pans out … although his supporters are adamant he is ready for a spot on the bench.  In fact they argue he would provide the high court with a needed voice against judicial overreach.

“Few is a solid conservative who doesn’t believe in judicial activism,” one Few backer told FITS.  “Given the recent school funding decision and its gross overstepping of judicial authority, we need justices like John Few who understand the constitutional limits on the judicial branch.”

Obviously stay tuned to FITS to find out who files …

Finally, we’d be remiss if we didn’t mention – again – that the process by which judges are selected (and elected) in South Carolina is in dire need of reform.  The Palmetto State is the only state in the nation in which lawmakers pick the slate of judicial candidates – and then vote on them.

That process has proven to be inherently corrupt … and we would once again call on reform-minded lawmakers to propose an alternative.

JUDICIAL MERIT SELECTION COMMISSION RELEASE (.pdf)
JUDICIAL MERIT SELECTION COMMISSION SCHEDULE (.pdf)

***

Related posts

SC

North Charleston Councilman Accuses Cop Of Falsifying Police Report

Will Folks
SC

‘Carolina Crossroads’ Update: SCDOT Set To Unveil New Plan To The Public

Will Folks
SC

Federal Lawsuit Alleges Racial Discrimination in Horry County School

Callie Lyons

8 comments

Realist February 6, 2015 at 10:43 am

Beatty would not be the first Black Chief Justice, Judge Ernest Finney holds that distinction already.

Reply
bfd February 6, 2015 at 10:53 am

he said 2nd black chief justice, Dumb @$$

Reply
Realist February 6, 2015 at 11:45 am

He edited it Dumb @$$.

Reply
Kickin' Chicken February 6, 2015 at 1:56 pm

“rampant speculation that personal issues from a failed 2009 candidacy could derail Few’s bid before it begins.” The fact that martial fidelity was not his strong suit won’t be an issue with our ethically-challenged Legislature.

Reply
Callin' 'em February 6, 2015 at 4:12 pm

Toal and Few are both skirt-chasing drunks, but they do differ in their judicial philosophies.

Reply
Thad Viers For Governor 2018 February 6, 2015 at 4:27 pm

Pleicones will succeed Toal.

The real race will be him.

Reply
Maybe February 6, 2015 at 6:13 pm

“S.C. Supreme Court chief justice Jean Toal – reelected in last year’s shadiness – must retire at the end of this year due to the state’s 72-year-old retirement threshold.”

Unless Toal gets the legislature to amend the statute, thus allowing her to continue to serve.

Reply
Squishy123 February 7, 2015 at 8:38 am

Will Thad’s campaign sign look like a baby holding an apple?

Reply

Leave a Comment