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| Judicial elections, 2012 |
| Judicial election dates |
The Georgia judicial elections in 2012 followed a different schedule than the elections of 2010. In 2010, judicial candidates participated in both the primary and general elections, but in 2012 candidates ran only in the primary election. Both Republican and Democratic candidates ran in the primary. Where a runoff was required, candidates competed in primary election runoffs.[1][2]
The primary election took place on July 31, 2012.
Georgia judicial elections summary, 2012 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Candidate | Incumbency | Primary Vote | Election Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carol Hunstein | Yes | 99% | |
| Harold Melton (Georgia) | Yes | 99% | |
| Hugh Thompson | Yes | 99% |
| Candidate | Incumbency | Primary Vote | Election Vote |
|---|---|---|---|
| Herbert Phipps | Yes | 99% | |
| John Ellington | Yes | 99% | |
| Michael P. Boggs | Yes | 99% | |
| Stephen Dillard | Yes | 99% | |
| Yvette Miller | Yes | 99.7% |
For information on the Georgia Superior Courts, visit: Georgia judicial elections, 2012 - Superior Courts.
As featured in JP Election Brief: Changing the rules in Florida and Nevada (and more!) on April 19, 2012.
Kevin McMurry and Emory Palmer are competing for a seat on the Coweta Judicial Circuit. Both men are area trial lawyers, and have received endorsements from Carroll County attorneys.[3] Carrolton criminal defense attorney Jason Swindle and District Attorney Pete Skandalakis have endorsed McMurry. Carrollton attorney Tommy Greer is backing Palmer.[3]
The men are vying to replace longtime judge Allen B. Keeble, who is retiring in December 2012 at the end of his current term. The race for this seat is a special, nonpartisan race, which will be present on both the Democratic and Republican tickets in the July 31, 2012 primary election.[3]
As featured in JP Election Brief: Three in the midwest and two in the south on March 8, 2012.
Augusta, Georgia: Augusta officials have expressed opposition to the new date of elections since the passing of House Bill 158 last year, which moved elections from November to July, the previous date of the Georgia general primary.[4][5] The issue, however, seems to be coming to an end. Augusta officials' opposition to the change in dates is based on an exception in the law that allowed them to keep their elections in November, even as the rest of the state was moving to a July election. A bill, introduced by Barbara Sims, would close this exception and standardize the movement of the election date across the state.[5] The bill has already passed the house, and is expected to pass the senate as well.[5]
Augusta officials argue that the July date could advantage Republican candidates and reduce Black voter turnout. Supporters of the change have disputed this claim.[5]
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Federal courts:
Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals • U.S. District Court: Middle District of Georgia, Northern District of Georgia, Southern District of Georgia • U.S. Bankruptcy Court: Middle District of Georgia, Northern District of Georgia, Southern District of Georgia
State courts:
Georgia Supreme Court • Georgia Court of Appeals • Georgia Superior Courts • Georgia State Courts • Georgia Business Court • Georgia Tax Court • Georgia Juvenile Courts • Georgia Probate Courts • Georgia Magistrate Courts • Georgia Municipal Courts
State resources:
Courts in Georgia • Georgia judicial elections • Judicial selection in Georgia
Categories: [2012 elections (judicial)] [2012 elections (judicial)]