From Ballotpedia 
| Idaho judicial elections, 2014 | |
| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Total candidates: | 92 |
| Primary candidates: | 54 |
| General election candidates: | 43 |
| Incumbency | |
| Incumbents: | 79 |
| Incumbent success rate: | 100% |
| Competition - general election | |
| Percent of candidates in contested races: | 9% |
| Percent uncontested: | 2% |
| Percent retention: | 89% |
2015 →
← 2013
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| Judicial Elections |
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| Judicial elections, 2014 |
| Judicial election dates |
| Candidates by state |
| Supreme court elections |
The Idaho judicial elections in 2014 featured one contested supreme court race, as well as seven contested races for the district courts--only two of which advanced to a runoff in November. Retention elections for the state's magistrates also occurred in November. Thirty-eight magistrate court judges were successfully retained with an average retention rate of 83.0%.
In addition to candidate lists, this page includes information about how the state's judicial elections work, as well as articles about noteworthy news in races across the state.
(I) denotes incumbent
4th District Court, Wetherell seat
7th District Court, Shindurling seat
The following judges faced a retention election in order to keep their seat. In such elections, the incumbent judge is not being evaluated against an opponent. Rather, he or she simply receives votes of "yes" to retain or "no", do not retain.
| Court | Judge | Votes |
|---|---|---|
| Click the arrows in the column headings to sort columns alphabetically. | ||
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Blaine Cannon | 85.8% |
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Calvin Campbell (Idaho) | 87.7% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Carolyn Minder | 78.7% |
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Casey U. Robinson | 86.1% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | Daniel J. McGee | 84.0% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Daniel Steckel | 77.8% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | Debra A. Heise | 83.5% |
| Idaho 3rd Judicial District | Debra A. Orr | 80.3% |
| Idaho 3rd Judicial District | F. Randall Kline | 80.3% |
| Idaho 3rd Judicial District | Gary D. DeMeyer | 79.6% |
| Idaho 7th Judicial District | Gil Gardner | 83.9% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | James Cawthon | 77.8% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | James D. Stow | 84.5% |
| Idaho 3rd Judicial District | Jayme Beaber Sullivan | 80.7% |
| Idaho 2nd Judicial District | Jeff P. Payne | 81.5% |
| Idaho 2nd Judicial District | John Judge | 89.6% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | Justin Julian | 78% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Kevin Swain | 77.6% |
| Idaho 7th Judicial District | L. Mark Riddoch | 83.9% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Lamont Berecz | 83.7% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | Lori T. Meulenberg | 85.1% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Lynnette McHenry | 78.9% |
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Mark A. Ingram | 88.9% |
| Idaho 7th Judicial District | Mark S. Rammell | 87.2% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Michael Reardon | 78.3% |
| Idaho 7th Judicial District | Michelle Mallard | 84.7% |
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Mick Hodges | 70.8% |
| Idaho 2nd Judicial District | Randall W. Robinson | 84.4% |
| Idaho 6th Judicial District | Rick Carnaroli | 87% |
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Rick L. Bollar | 87.1% |
| Idaho 7th Judicial District | Robert Crowley (Idaho) | 82% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | Robert James Caldwell | 85.3% |
| Idaho 4th Judicial District | Roger Cockerille | 76.7% |
| Idaho 6th Judicial District | Scott E. Axline | 86% |
| Idaho 7th Judicial District | Scott H. Hansen | 86% |
| Idaho First Judicial District | Scott Wayman | 84.8% |
| Idaho 6th Judicial District | Steven A. Thomsen | 86.3% |
| Idaho 5th Judicial District | Thomas D. Kershaw, Jr. | 88.1% |
Most races were decided during the state's primary election, as races only advanced to the November election if no candidate received a majority of the votes in the primary.
| Court | Candidate | Incumbency | Primary Vote | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Click the arrows in the column headings to sort columns alphabetically. | ||||
| Seventh Judicial District | Andre Linchenko Lawson | No | 26.3% | |
| First Judicial District | Barbara A. Buchanan | Yes | 100% | |
| First Judicial District | Benjamin R. Simpson | Yes | 100% | |
| Third Judicial District | Bradly S. Ford | Yes | 100% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Bruce L. Pickett | No | 49.0% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Cheri Copsey | Yes | 100% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Dane Hansen Watkins, Jr. | Yes | 100% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Darren B. Simpson | Yes | 73.7% | |
| Sixth Judicial District | David C. Nye | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Deborah Bail | Yes | 100% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | Eric Wildman | Yes | 100% | |
| First Judicial District | Fred Gibler | Yes | 100% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | G. Richard Bevan | Yes | 100% | |
| Third Judicial District | George A. Southworth | Yes | 100% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Gregory W. Moeller | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Jeanne M. Howe | No | 15.1% | |
| Second Judicial District | Jeff Brudie | Yes | 56.6% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Joel E. Tingey | Yes | 64.0% | |
| Idaho Supreme Court | Joel Horton | Yes | 65.8% | |
| Second Judicial District | John H. Bradbury | No | 43.4% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | John K. Butler | Yes | 100% | |
| First Judicial District | John Mitchell (Idaho) | Yes | 100% | |
| Second Judicial District | John R. Stegner | Yes | 100% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | Jon P. Brody | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Jonathan Medema | No | 18.8% | |
| Third Judicial District | Juneal C. Kerrick | Yes | 100% | |
| First Judicial District | Lansing L. Haynes | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Les Bock | No | 44.2% | |
| Sixth Judicial District | Lynn Brower | No | 45.1% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Lynn Graham Norton | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Melissa Moody | Yes | 100% | |
| Second Judicial District | Michael J. Griffin | Yes | 100% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | Michael R. Crabtree | Yes | 100% | |
| Sixth Judicial District | Mitchell W. Brown | Yes | 100% | |
| Third Judicial District | Molly Huskey | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Patrick Owen | Yes | 100% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | Randy J. Stoker | Yes | 100% | |
| 7th Judicial District | Randy Neal | No | 36.0% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Rebecca W. Arnold | No | 34.3% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Richard Greenwood (Idaho) | Yes | 55.8% | |
| First Judicial District | Richard S. Christensen | Yes | 100% | |
| Sixth Judicial District | Robert C. Naftz | Yes | 54.9% | |
| Fifth Judicial District | Robert Elgee | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Samuel A. Hoagland | No | 31.8% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Scott J. Davis | No | 22.4% | |
| Idaho Supreme Court | Sergio Gutierrez | Yes | 100% | |
| Sixth Judicial District | Stephen S. Dunn | Yes | 100% | |
| Seventh Judicial District | Steven H. Thompson | No | 28.6% | |
| Third Judicial District | Susan Wiebe | Yes | 100% | |
| Third Judicial District | Thomas J. Ryan | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Thomas Neville | Yes | 100% | |
| Fourth Judicial District | Timothy Hansen | Yes | 100% | |
| Idaho Supreme Court | Warren E. Jones | Yes | 100% | |
| Idaho Supreme Court | William "Breck" Seiniger | No | 34.2% | |
Supreme court, court of appeals and district court races are decided during the state's primary election. However, if no candidate in a judicial race receives over 50 percent of the votes in the primary, the two candidates who received the greatest number of votes advance to the general election, which functions as a sort of judicial runoff election.[3]
If a race advances to the general election, but one of the candidates leaves the race before that time, the candidate who received the next highest number of votes in the primary takes their spot on the general election ballot. In such a situation, if there is a tie for third place in the primary, the candidate to advance to the general election is chosen by lot by the secretary of state.[4]
Note: In May 2012, the Idaho Republican Party switched to a closed primary system, which required voters to identify as Republicans before voting. To read more about this, see: Some Idaho voters avoid closed primary, May 17, 2012.
Magistrates stand for retention in the general election, which is held in November. Judges file for retention in August. Specifically, they must file their declaration of candidacy no less than 90 days prior to the election.
The ballot includes the following language for such elections: "Shall Magistrate __ of __ County of the __ Judicial District be retained in office?" The voter may then choose to answer either "Yes" or "No". The magistrate must receive a majority of "yes" votes to be retained to a new term.[5]
The filing fee for supreme court and court of appeals candidates is $300. Candidates for the district courts must pay $150. Alternately, candidates may collect signatures in order to waive the filing fee. Supreme court and court of appeals candidates are required to collect 1,000 signatures and district court candidates are required to collect 200 (as of 2014).[6][7][8][9]
The following articles were current as of the dates listed.
Idaho primary results are in nowMay 29, 2014 | Click for story→ |
|---|---|
| See also: JP Election Brief: Primary season in high gear--what you may have missed and upcoming races to watch
Idaho's May 20 judicial primary saw eight contested judicial races in the state in 2014, with six of these decided in the primary. In Idaho, if a supreme court, court of appeals or district court candidate receives over 50 percent of the vote, that candidate automatically wins the election. If no primary candidate receives over half of the votes, then the two candidates who received the most votes progress to the general election. The general election in this case functions similarly to a runoff election.[10]
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Idaho judicial primary races to watchMay 15, 2014 | Click for story→ |
|---|---|
| See also: JP Election Brief: Candidate attacks
The primary election on May 20 brought an end to most of the state's contested judicial races. Candidates who received over 50 percent of the nonpartisan primary votes were declared the automatic winners, without having to run in the general election.[12]
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Conflict in Idaho Supreme Court raceApril 24, 2014 | Click for story→ | ||||||||||||
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| See also: JP Election Brief: Primary match-ups across the nation
Running for re-election to the Idaho Supreme Court this year was Joel Horton—a man who won the seat in 2008 by a margin of 0.02 percent.[14] His competitor, Boise attorney Breck Seiniger, published a write-up on his website criticizing Horton's conduct in a prior case.[15]
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Federal courts:
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals • U.S. District Court: District of Idaho • U.S. Bankruptcy Court: District of Idaho
State courts:
Idaho Supreme Court • Idaho Court of Appeals • Idaho District Courts • Idaho Magistrate Division
State resources:
Courts in Idaho • Idaho judicial elections • Judicial selection in Idaho