Vacated judge's
seat worries legal community
The Associated
Press
COLUMBIA - Five of the six candidates
running for the Circuit Court seat formerly held by U.S. Attorney
Reggie Lloyd are black.
If a black candidate wins the seat, it will mark the first
election of a black judge since Lloyd was approved in 2003.
That has some in the legal community worried the at-large seat
has been earmarked for a black judge, keeping minority candidates
away from other seats.
"What I don't want to happen is to get this stereotype that some
seats are reserved for blacks and the majority of seats are reserved
for whites," said former state Rep. I.S. Leevy Johnson, a black
Columbia lawyer.
Of the 140 judges on the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals and
Administrative Law, Circuit, Family and master-in-equity courts in
South Carolina, eight are black.
That means blacks make up about 6 percent of South Carolina's
judges, while they make up almost 30 percent of the state's
population.
The candidates for Lloyd's seat are Michelle Childs, Debra
Gammons, John Geathers, Daniel Hall, Joseph Strickland and William
Witherspoon. All but Hall are black.
Two of the five candidates for an open Administrative Law Court
seat are black.
"At least people feel more comfortable to apply. You can't win
the fight if you're not in the ring," said Rep. Leon Howard,
D-Columbia, who has pushed for changes in the way the state selects
its judges to expand diversity on the bench.
Howard thinks more black candidates are running in the upcoming
election because of recruiting efforts by the Legislative Black
Caucus and a change in the makeup of the Judicial Merit Selection
Commission.
Sen. Robert Ford, D-Charleston, was appointed to the 10-member
commission in November, bringing the number of blacks on the panel
to three.
Howard also is pushing to eliminate a cap on the number of
candidates the screening commission nominates. The maximum currently
is three nominees per judicial seat.
His bill passed the House, but a Senate committee amended the
measure to cap the number of nominees at five per seat.
Senate President Pro Tem Glenn McConnell, R-Charleston, said the
number of minority judges should grow as the candidate pool becomes
more diverse. Even though changes may be slow to come, McConnell
said simply running for a seat improves a candidate's chance of
being selected because they get to know legislators and become
comfortable with the
process. |