January 3rd, 2007

Pataki Got Low Marks For Judicial Diversity

On the front page of today’s New York Law Journal is a story about the 58 Supreme Court Justices that former New York Gov. George Pataki elevated to the four appellate divisions, New York’s intermediate appellate courts.

Of the 58, a whopping 83 percent were white men. Two were black, two were Hispanic and eight were women (one of whom is black). Pataki was also criticized for going outside the jurisdictions of the two New York City departments (1st and 2nd Appellate Divisions) in order to find his judges, instead of elevating Supreme Court justices from the area.

While the appointed judges were naturally conservative, given that Pataki is Republican, the article doesn’t criticize any of the judges based on lack of intelligence or seriousness.

I had posted just yesterday that one of the first executive orders Gov. Eliot Spitzer signed had to do with new judicial screening committees, and that they seemed to be designed to remove some of the political baggage that has haunted judicial selections in the past. I would guess that these screening committees, which will be bi-partisan, will put a focus on diversity that the Pataki administration lacked.

 

January 2nd, 2007

Spitzer Advocates for Judicial Reform in New York

In the world of New York and the law, there is really only one story in today’s paper: Crusading former attorney general Eliot Spitzer being sworn in as Governor, with vows to reform the state and improve the troubling ethical issues that he sees in Albany. And to pick better judges, (a subject overlooked by most of the media).

In making his reforms immediately by executive orders, he stopped government staffers from using state-owned cars, computers or other property for their personal business. This was the issue that brought down Comptroller Alan Hevesi.

Spitzer also prohibited state officials from starring in taxpayer-paid advertisements. This was a favorite activity of outgoing Gov. George Pataki that effectively acted as free advertising for him.

Spitzer also, thankfully, set up new procedures to ensure those seeking state judgeships are qualified. A copy of his executive order with respect to new judicial screening committees can be found here. It includes folks from the judiciary and the attorney general’s office, and from both majority and minority political parties.

The screening committees seem designed to find judges based more on core competence than political ideology. And that would be a very good thing.

[Addendum: On January 3rd, the New York Law Journal did a major front page story on judges Gov. Pataki elevated to appellate posts and their lack of diversity, which I posted about here.]