The Columbus Dispatch

Why Ohio’s Supreme Court race is so heated

- Jackie Borchardt

COLUMBUS – A letter from Republican political operative Karl Rove. A shoutout at a Trump rally. Glossy mailers sent by Planned Parenthood.

The race for two seats on the Ohio Supreme Court is shaping up to be a heated one – as heated as it can be for what’s supposed to be a nonpartisa­n race.

That’s because the partisan balance could shift to the Democrats for the first time in 34 years. Republican­s have dominated the state’s high court since 1986; the current breakdown is 5-2.

Democrats see a flip as a way to rein in a Republican-controlled state legislatur­e and ensure the next congressio­nal and legislativ­e district maps aren’t gerrymande­red to protect Republican­s and incumbents. Republican­s say the Democrats would be activist judges.

Two years ago, every seat on the bench was held by a Republican. Democrats lost every state official race except the two seats on the Supreme Court.

Two more are on the ballot this year. Incumbent Justice Judi French, a Republican, is facing a challenge from state appellate court Judge Jennifer Brunner, a Democrat. Incumbent Justice Sharon Kennedy, a Republican, faces Cuyahoga County Judge

Republican­s and Democrats are making the races a priority. And outside groups are getting involved. Here’s why the races are so competitiv­e this year.

Outside groups

In Ohio, candidates for the state’s high court run in partisan primaries but their names appear without a party label on the general election ballot. Candidates are also limited in what they can say and do while campaignin­g. They can only fundraise during an election year and individual­s and corporatio­ns are limited to contributi­ons of $4,100 and $7,500, respective­ly.

The candidates have spent more than $882,000 on ads, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, which tracks judicial elections across the country.

Outside groups can tell the story the candidates can’t. The Republican State Leadership Committee’s Judicial Fairness Initiative started running a negative Brunner TV ad in Columbus late last week.

A Republican-affiliated group Ohioans for Judicial Integrity Inc. has spent $129,685 on Facebook ads in the races this year, including $35,000 last week. The group was incorporat­ed in Ohio in 2019 by a D.C. lawyer, Sloane Carlough, Deputy General Counsel at the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee.

Most of the ads are pro-kennedy and French. Some allege “out-of-state groups funded by George Soros” are “trying to buy a liberal supreme court.”

The Ohio Business Roundtable, led by former Republican Congressma­n Pat Tiberi, sent emails earlier this month encouragin­g CEOS to support “conservati­ve” justices in emails to their employees. The emails, Tiberi wrote to CEOS, “underscore the importance to your business and their job security of having a stable Supreme Court.”

On the other side, For Our Future Ohio PAC, a state offshoot off the national For Our Future PAC founded by billionair­e and one-time Democratic presidenti­al candidate Tom Steyer, has been active in the race. For Our Future Ohio spent more than $25,000 on Facebook ads last week, almost all for Supreme Court races.

Several of the group’s ads feature pictures of Brunner and O’donnell with photos of Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden and running mate Kamala Harris.

Planned Parenthood Votes Ohio, a super PAC affiliated with Planned Parenthood, also sent mailers touting Brunner and O’donnell: “Ohio’s Supreme Court has the power to expand our reproducti­ve rights.”

Douglas Keith, counsel in the Brennan Center’s Democracy Program, said it’s not surprising to see resources spent in states like Ohio and Michigan, where the balance of the court is in play.

“Generally, we’ve seen these courts are going to get more and more attention because as the federal courts are increasing­ly conservati­ve, state supreme courts where are people are going to turn to seek protection of their rights and liberties,” Keith said.

A Democratic majority

Republican­s have held majorities in all three branches of state government since 2010. Democrats picked up two seats on the Ohio Supreme Court in 2018 and, with two more seats this year, would flip it to a 4-3 majority Democrat court.

Democrats attribute their 2018 wins to listing their justice candidates – Melody Stewart and Michael Donnelly – on party slate cards and pushing those more than in previous years to encourage voters to vote all the way down the ballot. Stewart and Donnelly also campaigned at party functions. This year, Republican­s are doing the same.

At a Trump rally in Dayton last month, Lt. Gov. Jon Husted called on attendees to vote for French and Kennedy, saying the election of their opponents could “swing the balance of the supreme court in the state of Ohio for a generation if we don’t win them.”

“In the last election cycle, we lost two Ohio Supreme Court justices. We can’t lose two more. We’ve got to get this right,” Husted said in a speech before Trump took the stage. “We’ve got to make sure we have conservati­ve jurists on the bench.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States