Event: "What's the Problem with Judges?"
Kansas Judicial Review & Kansas Eagle Forum
Invites you to an evening with

Phyllis Schlafly

Author, Radio Personality, Lawyer, Founder & President of Eagle Forum And The Most Accomplished Grassroots Political Leader In Our Country Today.

Speaking on "What's the Problem with Judges?"

Thursday, April 24, 2008
7:00 PM
Blue Valley Baptist Church
SW Corner of 151st & Antioch
Overland Park, KS
FREE ADMISSION

A freewill offering will be collected by the Kansas Judicial Review. Monies collected will be used to defray the cost of the November campaign ballot issue of electing our judges.

Professor faults way Kansas picks Supreme Court justices
Printed in the Kansas City Star -- November 30, 2007

By DAVID KLEPPER
The Star’s Topeka correspondent

TOPEKA | A University of Kansas law professor is taking aim at the way Kansas selects its Supreme Court justices.

Professor Stephen Ware looked at the ways all 50 states choose their top judges and, in a paper released Thursday, concluded that in Kansas, lawyers have too much influence.

Read the full article here.

Information on Commission Nominees to fill District Judge Seat
In July, the 10th Judicial District Nominating Commission sent the Governor three names to consider to fill one of the two vacancies on the Johnson County District Court bench. Once one vacancy is filled, the two remaining names will remain, along with a new name (James Phelan) to consider for the second vacancy. Per the Kansas City Star through the Commission, the four nominees are:

  • Charles Droege, an Overland Park attorney with a solo practice. Droege also serves as municipal judge for De Soto and Edgerton, and is an administrative hearing officer for the Kansas Department of Revenue.
  • Robert Bjerg, of Lake Quivira, who has a solo practice in Leawood.
  • Sara Welch, of Leawood, who has a solo practice in Olathe . She formerly was with the Johnson County district attorney’s office.
  • Johnson County Magistrate Judge James Phelan

Those against electing district judges claim the current system is not political, and that a system of electing judges would make the system too close to politics. In light of this argument, Kansas Judicial Review of Johnson County has obtained information regarding the leanings of these individuals:

Charles Droege

  • Democrat
  • Donated $3650 to Kathleen Sebelius
  • Donated $3550 to Paul Morrison
  • Donated $1000 to the Kansas Democratic Party

    Sara Welch

  • Unaffliated
  • Donated $150 to Paul Morrison

    Robert Bjerg

  • Donated $2000 to Paul Morrison
  • Donated $1000 to Kathleen Sebelius
  • On Steering Committee of "Justice, not Politics" to make sure judges are always appointed.
  • Wife Kathi attended Mainstream Coalition's "Take Back Kansas" event in 2006.

    James Phelan

  • No known political contributions

    Our State is at a Crossroads
    This is a very important time in Kansas. With so many important issues surfacing in recent months and years, the role the court system plays is of increasing importance. Judges are assigned to be independent arbiters of the law but are unfortunately becoming activists.

    Kansas judges are no longer content to determine the constitutionality of laws passed by our executive and legislative branches. As evidenced by the school finance lawsuit and the court's decisions in that matter, the Kansas Supreme Court has gone so far as to dictate what the legislature shall spend on education.

    The problem is, due to the current system of judicial selection in Kansas, there is no reliable check on the power of these judges, leaving them to make decisions which don't reflect the law established by the elected branches of government.

    Our Federal and State constitutions are based on the principle that governments derive their power from the consent of the governed. It's time to return to that principle.

    The role of Kansas Judicial Review of Johnson County
    In order to restore the balance of power that is currently under threat as a result of activist judges, we must change the system in which these judges are selected. The current system of judicial selection does not allow any true input from the people, and has a system of retention that, by design, doesn't allow for true examination and scrutiny of the judges that are in office. Kansas Judicial Review of Johnson County has been formed to not only provide information on the judges, but to seek and actively promote change in the system so as to provide more accountability from the courts, and more direct responsibility to the people.

    The Ballot Initiative
    In 2006, the Kansas Judicial Review of Johnson County was successful in mounting a grassroots effort to gather well more than 8,000 signatures and put the question of electing judges in the Tenth Judicial District on the November 2008 ballot.

    For more information about this, please consult the "Ballot Initiative" section on the left side of the website, and come back soon for additional information.

    Take a look at the key areas of our website.
    Our website is intended to be a resource for you -- including information about Kansas judges and their decisions, as well as our efforts -- most importantly on the ballot initiative in the Tenth Judicial District -- to change the system in Kansas. We will also have important news articles and information on how to get involved in Kansas Judicial Review of Johnson County.


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    Jim Atchison, Treasurer
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