News Release

Texans for Public Justice,  609 W. 18th Street, Suite E,  Austin, TX 78701, PH:(512) 472-9770, FAX:(512) 472-9830 E-Mail: tpj@tpj.org , http://www.tpj.org
For Immediate Release: 
May 21, 2002 
Contact: Craig McDonald, Andrew Wheat 
512-472-9770

Texas Lawyers Fund 72 Percent
of Appeals Judges’ Campaigns

Austin, TX: Lawyers and law firms—the very donors who have the greatest recurring interest in state court rulings—supply 72 percent of the campaign funds that Texas’ intermediate court judges raise to win office, a ground-breaking Texans for Public Justice (TPJ) study finds.

In Lowering the Bar: Lawyers Keep Texas Appeals Judges on Retainer, TPJ analyzes campaign contributions to 73 judges who sat on intermediate state appeals courts in January 2003.  These judges raised $6.8 million for 87 winning campaigns to sit on Texas 14 intermediate appeals courts between 1997 and 2002.  Led by leading defense and plaintiff firms that have numberous cases in state courts, lawyers and law firms supplied 72 percent ($4.9 million) of all the money in the justices’ war chests.

The justices’ financial dependency on attorneys leapt from 61 percent of their total in 1996 to 76 percent in the 2002 election cycle.  By comparison, Texas Supreme Court justices take 48 percent of their campaign funds from lawyers and law firms. The fact that Texas judges depend heavily on campaign donors with vested interest in state court rulings fosters widespread perceptions that justice is for sale in Texas.

“Members of the Texas Bar could jump-start badly needed judicial reforms if they would just say ‘No’ to pleas for campaign funds,” said TPJ Director Craig McDonald.  “We suspect that Texas attorneys give money because they share the public’s perception that few politicians—judicial or otherwise—are blind to big campaign contributions.”

Other major findings of Lowering the Bar include:

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Texans for Public Justice is a non-profit, non-partisan research and advocacy
organization that tracks the role of money in Texas politics.

Copies of this report and other of our publications are available by visiting www.tpj.org.


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