Supreme Court 2nd District: Longtime Judge Rochford, judicial newcomer
Curran vie for open seat
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[October 14, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Two seats on the Illinois
Supreme Court are up for vote on Nov. 8 and the outcomes of those races
could flip the state’s high court from a Democratic majority to a
Republican one for the first time in more than 50 years.
In the 2nd District, longtime Judge Elizabeth “Liz” Rochford, a
Democrat, is facing former Lake County Sheriff Mark Curran, a recent
Republican U.S. Senate candidate who has never served as a judge.
They’re vying for a 10-year term on the Supreme Court in a seat which
includes DeKalb, Kane, Kendall, Lake and McHenry counties. It’s one of
the state’s seven Supreme Court seats. Three of them are from District
1, which is Cook County, while four other geographic districts across
the rest of Illinois each have one seat.
It’s a race that’s become more visible on the airwaves in recent days,
with Gov. JB Pritzker chipping $500,000 into the Rochford campaign war
chest. Her backers have aired ads that highlight Curran’s long history
of antiabortion rhetoric. Rochford, meanwhile, has support from abortion
rights advocacy groups and her campaign website bills her as a champion
of women’s rights.
In recent podcast interviews with Capitol News Illinois, Rochford cited
her experience and record as evidence that she’ll approach the job with
impartiality, while Curran asserted independence from party and claimed
past controversial comments won’t have any bearing on how he approaches
his work on the bench. Those interviews can be found here and on most
podcast apps.
Rochford has served as a 19th Judicial Circuit judge since her
appointment to the bench in 2012. Prior to that, she served more than 22
years as a commissioner on the Illinois Court of Claims, three years as
an assistant state’s attorney in Cook County and 13 years in private
practice.
The Illinois State Bar Association and DuPage County Bar Association
rated her “highly recommended,” while the Lake County Bar rated her
“highly qualified.”
“That process is a very intense process,” Rochford said of the ratings
interviews. “It's very exhaustive, and it's done by a panel of attorneys
and retired judges who have worked across a vast scope of areas of
practice, [and] are from different political backgrounds.”
She said the panel assesses integrity, impartiality, legal ability,
temperament, court management, character and “experience in and around
the courthouse.”
“So I am very proud to have earned those highest recommendations …
because I think it speaks very well to the broad scope of my experience
over 35 years in law,” she said.
She also touted experience she believes will aid her in improving the
administrative duties of the court, including setting up local programs
in Lake County such as a guardianship help desk and creating a courtroom
committed to serving self-represented litigants in family law.
Curran is less than two years removed from his nomination as the
Republican candidate for U.S. Senate having unsuccessfully challenged
longtime incumbent Democrat Dick Durbin and gained a reputation for not
shying away from controversy.
He has also practiced law for more than three decades, starting in the
Cook County state’s attorney’s office in 1988, then becoming an
assistant Lake County state’s attorney two years later. He served as
chief of the Gang Crimes Bureau at the Illinois Attorney General’s
Office and in 2006 was elected Lake County sheriff as a Democrat before
switching to a Republican in 2008. He was re-elected in 2010 and 2014.
He went back into private practice after losing in Lake County in 2018.
He was rated “not recommended” by the State Bar Association, and he did
not participate in interviews with the county associations, resulting in
not qualified or not recommended assessments.
He said those ratings and the fact that he isn’t a judge don’t matter,
emphasizing his experience as a private practice attorney and
independent streak as a county sheriff.
“I've tried more juries than 99 percent of Illinois lawyers,” he said
when asked about the ratings. “You know, I think that the people who
have seen me will tell you that I'm a super talented lawyer.”
Curran said 70 percent of trial lawyer donations go to Democrats and
suggested the ISBA favors that party. But in the 3rd District race for
Supreme Court between incumbent Republican Justice Michael Burke and his
Democratic challenger Mary Kay O’Brien, the ISBA gave the Republican
higher ratings across the board.
Curran said in an interview with Capitol News Illinois his judicial
philosophy is a belief in “natural law,” citing the philosophies of
Thomas Aquinas, Thomas Jefferson and Socrates.
In a separate interview in July on the “Public Affairs” show hosted by
Jeff Berkowitz and published on the Illinois Channel YouTube page, he
said he believed “there’s no question there’s a deep state,” and it was
aligned against him in the GOP primary.
In his interview with Capitol News Illinois, he said he didn’t recall
the post-primary interview and didn’t directly define “deep state” or
answer as to whether he believes in one, but he said he believes “most
Republicans” are now on board with his candidacy.
While running for Senate in 2020, Curran apologized for a comment he
made that the late U.S. Rep. John Lewis was “not much of a civil rights
leader” because he didn’t speak out against abortion in the Black
community. He said while he describes himself as “Catholic” and
“pro-life,” his past claims won’t have any bearing on how he rules on a
law’s constitutionality.
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Judge Elizabeth Rochford and former Lake
County Sheriff Mark Curran are the two candidates for Illinois
Supreme Court in the 2nd District. (Credit: Judge Elizabeth Rochford
for Supreme Court Facebook page and Curranforcourt.com)
“Our job is not to legislate from the bench,” he said. “The Illinois
General Assembly passed a statute, you know, allowing abortion, you
know, very, very, very late, more so than any other state in the nation.
And it's the job of the General Assembly to pass laws. It's not the job
of the court. I have no authority to write laws and I don't see any
reason to believe that these laws are going to get overturned.”
And while Curran’s Facebook page circulated claims about voter fraud in
the 2020 election in a Jan. 3, 2021, post, he said other people had
access to that page and he hasn’t posted about the election.
“I've said Joe Biden won, and I absolutely believe that,” he said.
Curran said in previous campaigns he was “kind of a bowling ball in a
China shop.”
But as a judge, he said, his job will be “to call balls and strikes,”
adding, “there’s a lot of laws that are on the books that I personally
disagree with, but they're completely constitutional.”
As proof of his independence, he said he “stood up to the brass” in Lake
County on the subject of wrongful convictions, calling for the firing or
resignation of the head of the county’s criminal division and making
political enemies in the effort.
Curran asserted that Pritzker’s donation to Rochford was an attempt to
ensure a “rubber stamp” on the court, and he faulted Rochford for
previously donating to now-indicted Chicago Alderman Ed Burke, the
husband of Supreme Court Chief Justice Anne M. Burke.
“We need balance in the state. And the only way we're going to really,
truly get balance is by flipping that court from 4-3 Democratic court to
4-3 Republican,” Curran said.
Rochford said donations and endorsements play no role in how she rules.
Her judicial experience, she said, has helped her strengthen the “brick
wall” between her judicial duties and role as a candidate.
“I will tell you that after 10 years on the bench, when you put the
black robe on all of your personal opinions, and you know,
predispositions, are at the door, and you really are addressing the
facts as they are before you, and applying the rule of law,” she said.
Curran and Rochford each cited the “judicial canons of ethics,” which
are included in the Illinois Supreme Court code of conduct that
prohibits a candidate from stating how they would rule on any given
topic.
“We cannot speak on behalf of a political party. We cannot in any way
appear to commit to outcomes on cases,” Rochford said. “So matters that
could potentially come before the Supreme Court, I can't tell you how I
might rule on them or tell you my opinion on them. Because that would be
a demonstration of a potential bias.”
Curran was more willing to state his views on certain topics.
That included a controversial decision handed down by the court’s
Democratic majority that blocked a constitutional amendment from
appearing on the 2016 ballot. The amendment would have put the job of
legislative redistricting in the hands of a nonpartisan commission
rather than the General Assembly if it was approved by voters.
In a 4-3 decision, the Democratic majority ruled the ballot proposal
went beyond the narrow scope outlined in the state constitution that
governs citizen initiatives.
“Why should the citizenry of Illinois go out there and get signatures
for a referendum for a fair map and get it on the ballot – all the work
that goes to having fair maps where we're not gerrymandering the heck
out of these districts solely to maintain power – only to have the
Supreme Court shoot it down?” Curran said. “I mean, I'm not promising
how I'm going to rule on any decision. But I think that, you know, for
people that see that, it shows that you shouldn’t have a lot of
confidence in the way the Supreme Court has been going.”
Opponents of that decision used it as the main attack against former
Justice Thomas Kilbride, a Democrat, in their attempt to oust him from a
3rd District seat on the bench in 2020. Kilbride became the first
sitting justice to lose a retention race, garnering 56.5 percent of the
vote in favor of retention while needing 60 percent.
Rochford declined to comment on the implications of that vote.
“There are a lot of people who are engaged in very extreme political
views,” she said. “But that's not where I live, you know, I live in the
work of the courts. … That's what I do best. And really, political
commentary is not my forte.”
Curran spoke more directly to the role of partisanship on the high
court, stating that while he wouldn’t rule in a partisan manner, he’d
rule in a manner “that is a balance to the governor.”
“Let's say Darren Bailey wins – he is behind in the polls and everything
but, you know, I hope Darren Bailey wins,” Curran said when asked what’s
at stake in the Supreme Court election. “Even if he wins, chances are
he's going to be totally ineffective in many regards, because of the
fact that the General Assembly has enough votes to override any veto by
the governor. So the state will continue to be run by one party, that
party being the Democrats. And there's no check and balance or anything
in the state.”
When Rochford was asked what’s at stake, she pointed to the fact that
open Supreme Court races don’t come up very often and elected justices
serve 10-year terms
“I think it's essential that the Supreme Court justice has proper
credentials and experience to sit on the court,” she said.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering
state government that is distributed to more than 400 newspapers
statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and
the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |