From the Enquirer Columbus Bureau
Ohio court race attracts big money
By Jim Siegel
COLUMBUS - Wayne Pihl of Kenwood answered quickly: "Moyer, right?"
"Then there's a female, but I can't remember her name," the 65-year-old
insurance salesman added, after he was asked on a recent afternoon to name any
of the Ohio Supreme Court candidates.
Pihl is hardly alone in a public that generally pays little attention to court
races, particularly in a year when presidential candidates make Ohio a second
home and engage voters with topics such as the Iraq war, health care and the
economy.
Meanwhile, those promoting court candidates toss around thick phrases such as
"judicial activism" and discuss less-sexy subjects such as tort reform.
Riveting? Maybe not. Financially significant? You better believe it.
If money equates importance, then the Ohio Supreme Court races are the most
vital elections in Ohio behind the president. While the public may not follow
closely, special interests with deep pockets certainly do.
The Ohio State Bar Association estimates court candidates, state parties and
independent groups will at least match the $13 million spent in 2002, which
was tops in the nation.
Four seats are up for election in November, although Justice Paul Pfeifer is
running unopposed.
A key force driving so much money into Ohio Supreme Court races is that Ohio's
major economic players stand to gain or lose millions based on the court's decisions.
But that's true in all states, said Lawrence Baum, professor of political science
at Ohio State University. What makes Ohio unique is how often the court rules
4-3 on major cases.
"The court is perceived as being closely divided on issues, so a single
contest could change the court's majority," Baum said.
Although many observers think that the 2002 election flipped the court to a
business-friendly 4-3 majority, one vote doesn't leave much wiggle room when
three of seven seats are contested.
Corporations, insurance companies and the health-care industry are spending
millions to back Republican candidates, while most labor unions and trial lawyers
line up behind the Democrats.
The central issue: whether a jury should decide how much a plaintiff gets in
a civil lawsuit or whether that amount should be capped. The series of laws
are commonly known as tort reform.
In the past few decades, most recently in 1999, the Supreme Court has struck
down jury caps as unconstitutional. As a result, the business community has
complained of an unfriendly economic climate in Ohio, while the medical community
is screaming that skyrocketing medical malpractice premiums are driving doctors
out of Ohio.
Mary Yost, vice president of the Ohio Hospital Association, said her group will
spend an "unprecedented" $1.5 million on the court races this year.
That includes a Web site and get-out-the-vote drive for the 230,000 hospital
employees in Ohio.
"The entire balance of the court is at stake," Yost said. "We
won't have an opportunity like this to impact the court for at least another
10 years."
Gov. Bob Taft in January 2003 signed a law capping jury awards in medical malpractice
lawsuits. For the law to effectively reduce or stabilize malpractice insurance
rates, the health-care industry argues, the Supreme Court must uphold the law.
The state legislature is expected to pass a broader, business-backed tort reform
bill later this year.
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce is again using its independent group, Citizens
for a Strong Ohio, to back Republican court candidates.
So far, the group has raised more than $970,000, including $160,000 from Procter
& Gamble.
"When you have a court where a majority of justices are judicial activists,
and they see no problem with going beyond a strict interpretation of the law,
there is a lot less predictability," said Linda Woggon, vice president
of governmental affairs for the chamber.
But one person's judicial activist is another person's check-and-balance.
Unlike recent elections, the Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers this year is not
operating its own independent group, but rather is encouraging members to give
directly to Democrat campaigns.
Richard Mason, executive director of the academy, questions whether a conservative
court can defend individual constitutional rights from laws passed by a GOP-controlled
legislature.
"It appears to us that business and medical people want the court to vote
their way," he said.
"I think that means rubber-stamping legislation their lobbyists pushed
through the legislature."
Supreme Court matchups
Moyer vs. Connally
Thomas Moyer
Chief Justice, Ohio Supreme Court
Republican
Endorsed by: Fraternal Order of Police of Ohio; National Federation of Independent
Business; Ohio Association of Professional Firefighters; Ohio Chamber of Commerce;
Ohio Civil Service Employees Association; Ohio Farm Bureau; Ohio Hospital Association;
Ohio Manufacturers' Association; Troopers for a Safer Ohio.
C. Ellen Connally
Retired Cuyahoga County Municipal Judge
Democrat
Endorsed by: Ohio AFL-CIO; Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers; United Auto Workers;
Ohio Civil Service Employees Association.
Fuerst vs. Lanzinger
Nancy Fuerst
Judge, Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
Democrat
Endorsed by: AFL-CIO; Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers; Ohio Civil Service Employees
Association; Ohio Education Association; Ohio Federation of Teachers; Troopers
for a Safer Ohio; UAW Region 2.
Judith Lanzinger
Judge, 6th District Ohio Court of Appeals
Republican
Endorsed by: Ohio Chamber of Commerce; Teamsters Local 407; Fraternal Order
of Police of Ohio; Ohio Manufacturers' Association; Ohio Farm Bureau; National
Federation of Independent Business.
O'Donnell vs. O'Neill
Terrence O'Donnell
Justice, Ohio Supreme Court
Republican
Endorsed by: National Federation of Independent Business; Ohio Manufacturers'
Association; Teamsters Ohio; Ohio Hospital Association; Ohio Chamber of Commerce;
Ohio Farm Bureau; Fraternal Order of Police of Ohio; Ohio Right to Life.
William O'Neill
Judge, 11th District Ohio Court of Appeals
Democrat
Endorsed by: AFL-CIO; Ohio Education Association; Ohio Federation of Teachers;
Ohio State Troopers Association; Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers; Ohio United
Food and Commercial Workers; Ohio Civil Service Employees Association.