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THURSDAY HOT READ: THE WHITE HOUSE BUTLER

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From today's Wall Street Journal: 

 

Judge Butler served on the state Supreme Court for four years, enough time to have his judicial temperament grow in infamy. Having first run unsuccessfully in 2000, he was appointed by Democratic Governor Jim Doyle to the seat vacated by Justice Diane Sykes in 2004. But after serving four years, voters had seen enough of his brand of judicial philosophy, making him the first sitting justice on the Wisconsin Supreme Court in four decades to lose a retention election last year.

In Ferdon v. Wisconsin Partners, he drew the rage of doctors and others when he dismantled the state's limit on noneconomic damages in medical malpractices cases—the kind of tort reform that had been serving the state well. Business groups were likewise floored by his decision in Thomas v. Mallet, which allowed "collective liability" in lead paint cases—making any company a potential target, regardless of whether they made the paint in question. His nickname as a public defender was "Loophole Louis," a name that stuck when, as a judge, he was considered to be soft on crime.

At his confirmation hearing this month, Mr. Butler was quick to make light of his double rejection by Wisconsin voters, telling the Senate Judiciary Committee that "After 16 years on the bench, I may be a better judge than a politician."

Ahem. That's a coded nod to liberal groups like the George Soros-funded Justice at Stake that are trying to eliminate judicial elections. Rather than letting voters choose judges, they prefer so-called "merit selection" plans whereby judges are selected by committees of lawyers.

State court judges like Mr. Butler are likely to be an important source of nominees for President Obama. Because Democrats have been out of office since the Clinton Administration, many of the liberal judges on the federal district courts are older, an incentive for the White House to comb state courts for new judges—especially for the federal appeals courts.

Mr. Butler's nomination also shows the return to prominence of judicial ratings by the American Bar Association, which traditionally gives extra weight to "judicial experience." The ABA, which was ousted by the Bush Administration in part because of the ABA's notorious liberal bias, is now back in favor in the Obama White House. Mr. Butler served on the ABA's Standing Committee on Judicial Independence, a group that like Justice at Stake critiques how that independence is supposedly compromised by the need to raise money for judicial elections.

Mr. Butler's nomination shows the dominance of liberal ideology in Mr. Obama's judicial selections, and especially a contempt for Wisconsin voters

 

11 COMMENTS

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  1. If only he'd have been a little more contemptible, he'd be sitting in Sotomayor's seat.
  2. Cut The Obama some slack. He saved or created a job.

    I don't know which is more shameful: This corrupt administration of rank amateurs, or the idiots who voted to place it into power.
  3. A good number of voters in Wisconsin did vote for Butler. A good number believe his opponent lied to defeat him. These vast generalizations over the will of the voters being usurped (TARP/Health Care/Appointments) will be tested in 2012. Until then, Obama will appoint, and have confirmed, a great many justices. These are the spoils of victory in 2008. The GOP had better hope the economy doesn't recover or it will be a repeat in 2012.
  4. The Wall Street Journal--Another example of liberal media bias.

Storm Team 4

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