Florida
Related: About this forumVoters have the power to oust four far-right FL Supreme Court justices on Nov. 8. Will they use it?
Florida BulldogNext month voters can choose to evict up to five of the courts seven justices. In theory, Floridians could respond to the courts regressive designs by firing most of the designers.
They could do what the Sun Sentinel urged in an editorial last week: Remove Justices Charles Canady, Ricky Polston, Jamie Grosshans and John Couriel, all key players in the courts harsh new majority. The newspaper recommends keeping moderate Justice Jorge Labarga, whose principled but lonely dissents in high-profile cases have exposed the majoritys radical activism.
Yet it will be astonishing if any of the four conservatives lose at the polls.In the 44 years that Florida voters have been empowered to retain or reject appellate judges, theyve never once dropped a Supreme Court justice.
This campaign season, editorials in some major newspapers call for rejecting the four arch-conservative justices, arguing theyve broken trust with the public. Traditional media arent as far-reaching and influential as they used to be, however.
Proven vote-getting techniques like splashy advertising productions, social media saturation and a vigorous ground game seem to be reserved for the many higher-profile campaigns in the run-up to Nov. 8. Its hard to compete for airtime with Gov. Ron DeSantis versus Charlie Crist or Rep. Val Demings versus Sen. Marco Rubio.
The justices told the Orlando Sentinel editorial board that the smear campaign was part of then-Gov. Rick Scotts plot to reshape the court in his own partisan image.
I think its a smokescreen for the real issue, which is a political party wanting to control all three branches of government, Pariente told the board.
The counterattack worked. The justices won retention with 67-68 percent of the vote.
But their mandatory retirement at the end of 2018 let incoming Gov. DeSantis finish the job of transforming the court from majority-liberal to supermajority-conservative.
Today, as Pariente foretold, Republicans dominate all three branches of Florida government.
Karl said the high courts post-midterm agenda is obvious.
I fully anticipate that the Florida Supreme Court will uphold the 15-week abortion ban, he said, and reverse the 1989 case [the In re: TW decision] that found our Florida constitutional right to privacy guarantees the right of a woman to make her own health care decisions.
rso
(2,460 posts)My family and I are all voting against retention of these judges, and the Democratic Party has sent info via mail on these judges to registered voters, so Im hopeful.
jimfields33
(18,904 posts)When replacement to be worse? Thats my concern. DeSantis can pick their replacement. Crist chose moderates according to many. Ill still vote then out. Just dont be shocked with the replacements.
In It to Win It
(9,620 posts)I'm aware of the 'fight' I chose.
I'm not entirely confident that these judges will lose their retention election. If they do lose, DeSantis can appoint their replacement. Like you, I will vote 'no' on them regardless. It really hinges on the belief that Charlie Crist can pull out a win. Truthfully, I'm not entirely confident on Crist winning either but I'll vote for him anyway.
jimfields33
(18,904 posts)I was look at them with pity for how dumb they are. I live in a red area so go figure.
Chainfire
(17,757 posts)The same goes for the Constitutional amendments and county referendum. If the Republicans got it on the ballot, I don't want it.
dameatball
(7,603 posts)Democratic Party recommendations. In this state I doubt that either approach will prevail. My vote was mailed in last week, so we shall see.
snowybirdie
(5,632 posts)to pick, so I googled them all. Didn't vote for any Deathsantis appointees. We received no literature from any Democratic party here in SW Florida. That is if one exists!