Politics

'Ten years and out'

The case for term limits for judges (John Andrews in the Wall Street Journal, Aug. 10) Americans' concern with a court system out of control has simmered for decades, never coming to a boil. The perennial frustration with judges rewriting the laws and the Constitution is like Mark Twain's comment on the weather--everybody talks about it but nobody does anything about it. That may be about to change in Colorado, if voters pass judicial term limits this fall.

Coloradans have long favored the principle that rotation in office can help curb the abuse of power. The state, along with Oklahoma, led the nation in 1990 by imposing term limits on the legislative and executive branches of state government; citizen initiatives later extended the limits to most local officials and to our congressional delegation--though the latter was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.

Judicial term limits have not met a great deal of legislative success. Provisions instituting them for judges were part of an omnibus judicial reform that I was unable to get past a Republican state Senate in 1999 and 2004. Impeachment proceedings against a constitution-flouting judge also failed in a Republican House in 2004. And a proposal for recall of judges was killed by the Democratic Senate last year.

But this year, reformers have gathered petitions with about 108,000 signatures, and recently set up a November 2006 vote on "10 years and out" for justices of the Colorado Supreme Court and judges of the Court of Appeals. The ballot initiative will almost certainly be certified in the coming days. [Note: It was certified on August 10, going to the ballot as Amendment 40.]

The petition drive was fueled by outrage at a blatantly political June 12 ruling of the state Supreme Court--relying on a technicality, the Court threw off the ballot a popular immigration-reform proposal. Other hot buttons include the justices' leniency to murderers in last year's Harlan and Auman cases; a judge in a custody dispute who restricted where Cheryl Clark could take her daughter to church, lest the child be exposed to "homophobia"; a 2003 decision favoring the teacher unions, snaring poor kids in bad schools; and the Taylor Ranch case, trampling property rights.

The last, Lobato v. Taylor, a property-claims ruling by the Colorado Supreme Court in 2002, is less notorious than Kelo, but its disruptive effect in clouding all Colorado land titles cannot be overstated. "We risk injustice elsewhere," a dissenting opinion warned, by accepting the plaintiffs' radical theory of "communal rights" as superior to "the sanctity of private property [with] predictability and clarity of law." But the Democratic-dominated court did just that. With its requirement for notification of all potential claimants under old Spanish land grants (dating to 1863) in order to perfect a title, Lobato invites mischief across all 103,598 square miles of Colorado. Property-owners will hear a lot about this threat in coming weeks.

Up to 1965, Colorado was one of the many states that elected all their judges in partisan campaigns. We've since been on the so-called "Missouri merit" plan, where the governor appoints judges from a slate prepared by a nominating commission. Judges then face periodic retention elections, with "retain" or "do not retain" recommendations from a judicial performance commission. It sounds good, but fewer than 1% of all judges ever get dismissed by voters, leading to virtual life tenure with little accountability.

Our ballot issue, "Limit the Judges," would reduce the retention cycle to four years (after an appointee's first provisional term, which can be as short as two years), and cap total service at three terms, about 10 years or a bit longer depending on date of appointment. It applies only to Supreme Court justices, whose current retention cycle is 10 years, and Appeals Court judges, now on an eight-year cycle. District judges' terms are not affected.

This modest proposal has infuriated the bench and bar--aided and abetted, of course, by the media--who characterize it as radical, reckless, an assault on judicial independence and a dangerous politicizing of the courts. It is none of those. We don't go back to elected judges, or change the merit selection process. We don't make it easier to remove a miscreant--or even merely unpopular--judge. We may not even shorten the average length of appellate court tenure, which is only about eight years now.

All we seek to do is to balance the requirement for rotation in office, so it applies to all three branches of state government from now on. Why should the potential abuse of power or self-serving entrenchment by state senators, representatives, the governor and other elected executives be checked by a term limit, while the activism of the judiciary is not subjected to the same?

The judicial term limit plan has an additional provision, if the reform is approved this year, that would eject at the end of 2008 any incumbents on the two high courts who have already served 10 years or more. Limit the Judges, then, functions not only as a constitutional amendment but also a referendum on the performance of our robed policy makers.

Five of the seven state Supreme Court justices, all mostly liberal, would be gone in two years if the measure passes; likewise seven of 15 Appeals Court judges. The Colorado Bar Association bemoans a cumulative loss of 185 years' experience on the bench, but that argument may prove no more persuasive to voters in relation to the judicial branch than when it was previously deployed in vain for the legislative branch.

In my experience, term limits have helped make Colorado's legislature more respectful of the plain language of the constitution and more responsive to the sovereign will of the people. I believe term limits can yield similar benefits in our court system.

Robert Nagel, a law professor at the University of Colorado, argues that the imperial judiciary is self-stoking; that is, the legal system, by its very design, inexorably tends toward excess because it is sealed off from democratic forces. He recommends devising "other political checks" on the runaway courts. Colorado's judicial term limits, it seems to me, are a good start.

Arapahoe DA endorses judicial term limits

(Press Release from Limit the Judges: Yes on 40) Carol Chambers, District Attorney for the 18th Judicial District, today announced her support for Amendment 40, the term limits initiative for 10 years’ maximum service on the Colorado Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. Chambers, a Republican, spoke at a State Capitol press conference. She was elected in 2004 as chief prosecutor for the district including Arapahoe, Douglas, Elbert, and Lincoln Counties. She noted that district attorneys are themselves subject to a term limit of eight years.

At the same press conference, Michael Laden of Conifer announced that he and other attorneys are helping organize a group supporting passage of Amendment 40, to be known as Lawyers for Limits. He said the Colorado Bar Association’s opposition to the measure was determined without member input and does not speak for all lawyers.

Laden is retired after 31 years in solo law practice, specializing in litigation. The other founding members of Lawyers for Limits are Steve Foster of Steven J. Foster PC in Boulder, and John Archibold, retired from practice with Kelly Stansfield O’Donnell in Denver.

Comments from lawyers supporting term limits, posted at www.limitthejudges.com, include one who said, "No judge fears not being re-elected." Another wrote, "I am totally against career judges." Another complained that the Colorado Bar Association leadership, in its position on Amendment 40 and other ballot issues, has pursued "personal political whims without consulting members." The CBA’s "direct advocacy [with voters] seems hard to justify for a non-profit," a fourth attorney observed.

The citizens’ petition for judicial term limits was certified Thursday by Secretary of State Gigi Dennis as Amendment 40 on the November 2006. The campaign chairman is former Senate President John Andrews. Co-chairmen include state Sen. Tom Wiens, state Sen. Greg Brophy, and state Rep. Ted Harvey.

Andrews picks'em in primary

    Updated 8/10, primary results now final. Victory on 8/8 came to most of the candidates I favored. Legislative, only McNaught and Holloway went down. Paschall and Kopel lost their county treasurer bids, the latter by an excruciating 36 votes out of 24,000 cast; a recount is pending there. Dyer won easily for Arapahoe commissioner - with my vote, as it turned out.

    "Right wing flies high," said the Rocky afterward. But now comes the hard part: electing Beauprez as governor and taking back a GOP legislature. To achieve that, we need more of the class shown by Candy Figa in her HD-38 loss to Matt Dunn, and less of the coyness manifest in Betty Ann Habig's refusal to congratulate HD-37 winner Spencer Swalm.

Many of us in Colorado are already casting our ballots in the August 8 primary election. Donna and I will do the "vote at your kitchen table" thing this week.

I'm glad our state has genuine party primaries where one must be registered in the party to participate. Michigan and some other states have this odd open primary system allowing Republican nominating contests to be hijacked with frivolous votes from Dems and unaffiliateds, or vice versa. Ugh. My thoughts on why parties are good for American politics are here.

Anyway, what with my 30-plus years in the local GOP and my several campaigns (mixed win-loss record), neighbors sometimes ask how I voted. So here's the rundown.

** Spencer Swalm for House District 37, my own state representative. He's a true Reaganite, enough said.

** Dan Kopelman for Arapahoe County Treasurer. He's a staff alumnus of Tancredo and Coffman, well qualified to keep the county's checkbook and collect our taxes (ugh again).

** Still deciding between Zimmer and Dyer for Arapahoe County Commissioner. Both are better on taxes and spending than McKnight.

Outside my immediate area, I really like Matt Dunn for House 38 over in Littleton... and in the Senate primaries I've endorsed Ted Harvey in Douglas County, Mike Kopp in Jeffco, also Marty Neilsen in the neighboring Jeffco & mountain district, Scott Renfroe in Weld, and Josh Penry out west in Grand Junction.

Oops, several more state House races to mention... Kevan McNaught for HD-51 in Loveland, Pat Holloway for HD-23 in Jeffco, also Marsha Looper for HD-19 and Kent Lambert for HD-14, both in Colorado Springs.

And Doug Lamborn, known to me as a fine conservative from our Senate years together, is my guy for Congress in that hot 5th CD primary centered in the Springs.

Lastly, Mark Paschall deserves another term as Jefferson County Treasurer; we were legislative allies in defense of the taxpayer and the traditional family.

A high-ranking election official told me today that with no statewide contests, the primary turnout is expected to be very light. That means YOUR vote counts all the more. Cast it wisely!

Culture of death, your place or mine?

By Krista Kafer (krista555@msn.com) It was a tough week for women and children. The US Senate passed Colorado Representative Diana DeGette’s bill to provide taxpayer funds for the killing of unborn children to harvest their tissues. Michael Schiavo, who starved his mentally impaired wife to death, came to town to campaign for Angie Paccione in her election bid against Representative Marilyn Musgrave. He has formed a Duty-to-Die PAC to fund candidates who support euthanasia. On the other side of the world, terrorists murdered over a hundred train passengers in India. In Iraq, the <a href="killing of civilians has hit an all time high.

It is easy to see how the culture of death pervades terrorist ideology. To them human life has little or no worth. The value of jihad is greater than the value of human life. Where human life is not sacred, guns fire into crowded market places and bombs explode on buses.

In America, the culture of death lacks the loud drama and irrational fanaticism of its eastern counterpart. Quietly it has seeped into the foundation like lethal radon gas. And it seems so eminently sensible. If over a million children a year die from abortion, isn’t that a million fewer unwanted children? If they are going to die anyway, why not use their tissues to help others? Why not let people who cannot feed themselves die? Aren’t they and their families better off? Don’t these people deserve privacy?

The privacy of individuals seems like such a reasonable demand. The Rocky Mountain News article about Schiavo says he will be campaigning for those “who share his sense of privacy.” The article quotes Paccione saying "Michael puts a human face on the invasion of privacy.” This sounds familiar. Three decades ago, the Supreme Court denied the protection of unborn children under the auspices of “privacy. In the United States, the privacy of some is greater than the life of others.

If the value of privacy trumps that of life itself in this country, who are we to judge Muslims who hold the value of jihad over life? What is the difference? In practice, nothing.

DeGette bill would expand culture of death

By Krista Kafer (krista555@msn.com) Should Nazi scientists have experimented on Jews, Gypsies and other concentration camp prisoners they knew were going to be put to death anyway? Would they not be putting them to a good use that might help others?

The very question fills me with revulsion.

It is with the same disgust and sorrow that I read in the Rocky Mountain News that Colorado Congresswoman Diana DeGette’s bill to fund embryonic stem cell research is moving forward in the US Senate. The bill, which passed the US House of Representatives last year in a 238-194 vote, will permit federal tax dollars to be used to kill human embryos to extract their stem cells.

Stem cells are special in that they can become other types of cells like muscle cells or a brain cells. From conception to old age, the human body creates stem cells. In adults, stem cells are present in the blood, bone marrow, skin, brain, liver, pancreas, fat, and hair follicle. Stem cells are also present in the placenta, umbilical cord, and amniotic fluid. Stem cells can be harmlessly culled from these sources to be used in medical experiments to treat diseases such as diabetes and spinal cord injuries. Adult stem cells may have the potential to cure a number of degenerative diseases such as Parkinson’s disease.

Unborn children, like adults, also have stem cells. Removal of these cells kills the baby. Nevertheless, some scientists favor harvesting 5- to 7-day old embryos’ cells even though there has been little success in using these cells to treat illness in other people. And even though embryonic stem cells, unlike adult stem cell treatments, can cause tumors or may be rejected by the treated person’s immune system.

Proponents exaggerate the potential benefits of embryonic stem cell research while down playing the fact that unborn children must die in these experiments. These are “spare” or “unused” embryos, they say, that will be discarded from fertility clinics. Created by parents who don’t want them anymore, the embryos will be wasted unless scientists can revive them from their frozen stasis and take their stem cells, albeit killing them in the process.

Spare people. Wasted people. Unused people. Unwanted people. We should recoil at the rhetoric. Sadly we may soon have no choice but to support the killing of the unborn with our taxes. Keep in mind that in the US it is legal to kill a child from conception until birth and to sell her body or tissues including her stem cells. It is also perfectly legal to donate money to these endeavors. Thanks to George Bush, however, we, the public, don’t have to be complicit in these crimes. This may soon change. The DeGette bill, if passed and signed into law, will ensure your tax dollars are spent to kill unborn children to harvest their tissues.

Nazi scientists learned a great deal about hypothermia and other conditions and diseases through the untold suffering and death of their victims. If embryonic stem cell experiments produce some benefit, and this is uncertain, it will be bought with the lives of innocents. If the DeGette bill should pass, each of us will have a hand in their deaths.