Patti Wenzel

Ghosts of previous election haunt Supreme Court choices

By - Jan 28th, 2011 04:00 am

The door to the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Photo courtesy the State of Wisconsin.

Michael Gableman is not up for re-election until 2018, but you’d never know it if you are tuned into the 2010 Wisconsin Supreme Court race.

Justice David Prosser is seeking his second full term on the high court, challenged by attorneys Jo Anne Kloppenburg, Joel Winnig and Marla Stephens. But during a judicial forum held at the Milwaukee Bar Association on Thursday, most of the conversation dealt with Gableman’s campaign and the Supreme Court’s failure to come to a decision on how he should be punished for possible lies against his opponent Louis Butler in campaign ads.

All three challengers cited the court’s Gableman decision to be wrong. Stephens, the former chairperson of the Wisconsin Judicial Council, called Gabelman a liar and said the court should have had the courage to say he was wrong. Winnig, a Madison attorney who has previously run for Supreme Court, said the decision compelled him to run for Prosser’s seat.

“I saw dishonest arguments by (Gableman’s) attorneys and they were not challenged properly,” Winnig said. He added that Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson’s comments during the hearing that “it is difficult to judge someone you work with” made him understand he had to stand up for the people and integrity of Wisconsin.

Candidate Joel Winnig. Photo courtesy Wisconsinvote.org

Kloppenburg, a state assistant attorney general focusing on environmental issues, added that the case has damaged public confidence in the court and its integrity. She tried to stay above the fray of the debate, telling voters that she would act as the kind of justice she would want to argue before.

Prosser was on defense most of the time, explaining his position on Gableman and comments made by his campaign director, Brian Nemoir, that Prosser would “protect the conservative judicial majority and act as a common sense complement to both the new administration and Legislature.”

“I am a judicial conservative, not an activist,” Prosser said. “In fact,  Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce found me to be the least activist justice, and that is not a bad thing.”

Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice David Prossor. Photo courtesy WI Supreme Court

Prosser said he understands his role on the court; not to substitute his viewpoint for the view of the Legislature that crafts laws. “I respect the other branches of government so long as they’re constitutional.”

As for Gableman, Prosser was one of the three votes to not censure his fellow justice. He said he looked at the case against Gableman as a strict First Amendment case and considered the fact that three appellate court judges also voted to dismiss the charges.

Throughout the discussion all the candidates focused on integrity and restoring the public trust in the court. Kloppenburg said the labels of conservative, liberal, progressive or activist are detrimental to the discussion. She said justices shouldn’t prejudge cases and labeling fellow justices cuts off the free discussion of the rule of law.

“I will put all of (the labels) aside and focus on the law, applying the facts with an open mind,” she said. “Civility matters. It sends a message that the court is doing its job.”

Winnig proudly calls himself an independent; insisting that justices should interpret the law and that means not always doing what is popular. He promises voters that he can work with anyone, explaining that even though he respects the Chief Justice, he will not always do what she says.

Candidate Marla Stephens. Photo courtesy Wisconsinvote.org

Stephens describes the current court as divisive and made up of camps and loyalties. She wants to end that through the election. “During my 10 years as chair of the Judicial Council, I worked with many different viewpoints and we all interacted respectfully,” she said. “We need to focus on our common beliefs and what we agree on. Everyone needs to be listening.”

Prosser took issue with the other candidates that he is part of the problem on the court, explaining how he at one time came to the Chief Justice’s side when her position was threatened, but then fell out of favor with her. “There is divisiveness on the court, but I am not the source of it.”

Instead, he calls for an independent outside study on how the court can improve its image and communication between members.

Finally, an audience question that is near to most journalists hearts:  Should access to open court records be restricted, especially on the Internet?  Again, all agreed that the state’s open records law demands the public have access to court records. The problem has been when citizens go onto the web-based Circuit Court Access Program to conduct background checks on potential employees, babysitters and boyfriends. Some of the information has been misinterpreted, leaving innocent people to suffer job loss and other indignities.

Candidate JoAnne Kloppenburg. Photo courtesy Wisconsinvote.org

Prosser touted that he has been instrumental in securing stable funding for CCAP, but added if it or any court records are inaccurate, they need to be corrected.

Stephens said the open records law is clear, but the real question is whether court records be on the Internet. She, along with Winnig and Kloppenburg, all suggested some change in captioning on the CCAP site to alert users if the charges were dismissed or expunged, leaving the person listed on the page as legally innocent.

The four candidates will appear on the Feb. 15 ballot. The top two voter getters will move onto the April 5, with that winner serving a ten-year term on the State Supreme Court.

Categories: Politics

0 thoughts on “Ghosts of previous election haunt Supreme Court choices”

  1. Anonymous says:

    Gableman is an embarrassment to our state, as are Ziegler and Prosser. It could be said that Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce now owns the governor’s office and the legislature – I think we should take back the Supreme Court for the people!
    I’m endorsing Marla Stephens, but any of the challengers would be preferable to Prosser.

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