Louisiana judicial elections, 2017

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2017 Election Dates
Deadline to file candidacy
January 13, 2017
Primary election
March 25, 2017
General election
April 29, 2017
2017 State
Judicial Elections
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Louisiana holds several judicial elections per year. These elections are partisan.

The first 2017 judicial election was held in Louisiana on March 25, 2017. Three seats on the Louisiana Circuit Courts of Appeal were up for election; one of these three was elected at the filing deadline since there was only one candidate for it. The filing deadline to run in this election was Friday, January 13, 2017.

Louisiana elections use the Louisiana majority-vote system. All candidates compete in the same primary, and a candidate can win the election outright by receiving more than 50% of the vote. If no candidate does, the top two vote recipients from the primary advance to the general election, regardless of their partisan affiliation.

For information about which offices are nominated via primary election, see this article.

HIGHLIGHTS
  • Three Republican candidates filed to run for a seat on the Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal. This seat was previously occupied by James Genovese, who was elected in 2016 to the Louisiana Supreme Court. Candyce Perret and Susan Theall were the top two finishers, but neither received more than 50 percent of the vote; Perret defeated Theall in a general election on April 29.
  • One candidate filed to run for a seat on the Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal. This seat was previously occupied by retired Judge Ernest Drake. Because only one candidate, Allison H. Penzato, filed to run for the seat, she was elected unopposed and did not appear on the ballot.
  • Two Democratic candidates filed to run for a seat on the Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal. This seat was previously occupied by retired Judge Dennis Bagneris. Paula Brown defeated Tiffany Gautier Chase for the seat at the primary; this seat did not appear on the general election (or runoff) ballot.
  • Two other seats were up for election on October 14, 2017. James M. Stephens (Independent) defeated Sharon Marchman (R) in the general election for Section 2A on the First District of the Louisiana Second Circuit Court of Appeal. Tiffany Gautier Chase (D) defeated Tracey Flemings-Davillier (D) in the general election for Division B on the First District of the Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal.

    Seats[edit]

    Louisiana Circuit Courts of Appeal[edit]

    First Circuit[edit]

    Third District, Division C[edit]
    This seat was formerly held by retired Judge Ernest Drake.

    Allison H. Penzato (R) Green check mark transparent.png (Unopposed)

    Because Penzato was the only candidate to file for this seat, she did not appear on the ballot and was considered elected after running unopposed.

    Second Circuit[edit]

    First District, Section 2A[edit]
    This seat was formerly held by retired Judge John Larry Lolley.

    Sharon Marchman (R)
    James Stephens (I) Green check mark transparent.png

    Third Circuit[edit]

    Third District, Division B[edit]
    This seat was formerly held by James Genovese, who was elected to the Louisiana Supreme Court in 2016.

    Candyce Perret (R) Green check mark transparent.png
    Susan Theall (R)
    Vanessa Waguespack Anseman (R)

    Fourth Circuit[edit]

    First District, Division B[edit]
    This seat was formerly held by Judge Paul Bonin, who was elected to a local judgeship in 2016.

    Tiffany Gautier Chase (D) Green check mark transparent.png
    Tracey Flemings-Davillier (D)

    First District, Division C[edit]
    This seat was formerly held by retired Judge Dennis Bagneris.

    Paula Brown (D) Green check mark transparent.png
    Tiffany Gautier Chase (D)

    Election results[edit]

    April 29 election results[edit]

    Candyce Perret defeated Susan Theall in the general election for the Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal, Third District, Division B.

    Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal, Third District, Division B General Election, 2016
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Republican Green check mark transparent.png Candyce Perret 54.20% 26,681
         Republican Susan Theall 45.80% 22,548
    Total Votes 49,229
    Source: Louisiana Secretary of State

    March 25 election results[edit]

    Third Circuit[edit]

    Candyce Perret and Susan Theall defeated Vanessa Waguespack Anseman in the primary election for the Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal, Third District, Division B.

    Louisiana Third Circuit Court of Appeal, Third District, Division B, 2016
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Republican Green check mark transparent.png Candyce Perret 40.98% 16,599
         Republican Green check mark transparent.png Susan Theall 36.66% 14,849
         Republican Vanessa Waguespack Anseman 22.36% 9,058
    Total Votes (530 of 530 reporting: 100%) 40,506
    Source: Louisiana Secretary of State

    Fourth Circuit[edit]

    Paula Brown defeated Tiffany Gautier Chase in the election for the Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal, First District, Division C.

    Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal, First District, Division C, 2016
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Paula Brown 51.21% 13,427
         Democratic Tiffany Gautier Chase 48.79% 12,791
    Total Votes (351 of 351 reporting: 100%) 26,218
    Source: Louisiana Secretary of State

    October 14 election results[edit]

    Second Circuit[edit]

    James M. Stephens (Independent) defeated Sharon Marchman (R) in the general election for Section 2A on the First District of the Louisiana Second Circuit Court of Appeal.[1]

    Louisiana Second Circuit Court of Appeal, First District, Section 2A General Election, 2017
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Independent Green check mark transparent.png James M. Stephens 51.55% 9,438
         Republican Sharon Marchman 48.45% 8,870
    Total Votes 18,308
    Source: Louisiana Secretary of State, "Official election results," accessed November 28, 2017

    Fourth Circuit[edit]

    Tiffany Gautier Chase (D) defeated Tracey Flemings-Davillier (D) in the general election for Division B on the First District of the Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal.[1]

    Louisiana Fourth Circuit Court of Appeal, First District, Division B General Election, 2017
    Party Candidate Vote % Votes
         Democratic Green check mark transparent.png Tiffany Gautier Chase 58.96% 43,426
         Democratic Tracey Flemings-Davillier 41.04% 30,229
    Total Votes 73,655
    Source: Louisiana Secretary of State, "Unofficial election results," accessed November 28, 2017

    Selection[edit]

    See also: Judicial selection in Louisiana

    Primary election[edit]

    Judges compete in a primary election against candidates of all parties--what is sometimes called a "jungle primary." If no candidate receives over 50 percent of the vote (a "majority vote"), the top two candidates run against each other in the general election. If a candidate does receive a majority vote in the primary, he or she is declared elected as an unopposed candidate and will not be listed on the general election ballot.[2]

    In the event that candidates are competing for more than one open seat on a court, the majority vote is decided by "dividing the total votes cast for all of the candidates by the number of offices to be filled [and] dividing the result so obtained by two," according to the Louisiana Secretary of State website. The SOS gives the following example:

    1040 total votes cast ÷ 3 offices to be filled = 346.6
    346.6 ÷ 2 = 173.3

    In the above example, 174 votes are necessary to win for each of the 3 offices.[2]

    General election[edit]

    A general election is won by obtaining the highest number of votes. In the case of races with two or more open seats, the two or more candidates with the highest votes are declared the winners. If there is a tie, an additional election will be scheduled for the third Saturday after the announcement of the election results.[2]

    Becoming a candidate[edit]

    Qualifications[edit]

    To qualify for an election, a candidate must meet the individual requirements for the office he or she seeks.[3] To view these specific requirements—which pertain to law experience, length of residency and age—visit Ballotpedia's Louisiana judicial selection page.

    Declaration of candidacy[edit]

    Candidates must submit a notice of candidacy form to the Louisiana Secretary of State's Office. On this form, the candidate indicates that he or she:

    • is a registered voter;
    • is not currently under an order of imprisonment for conviction of a felony;
    • has filed federal and state income tax returns each of the last five years, or filed an extension (or was not required to do so);
    • agrees to the state's campaign finance requirements;
    • does not owe any outstanding fines, fees or penalties pursuant to the Code of Governmental Ethics; and
    • is knowledgeable of governmental ethics offenses.[4]

    Fees and nominating petitions[edit]

    Candidates are required to either pay a fee (varying by judgeship; see the Louisiana judicial elections page) or file a nominating petition with a required number of signatures. An additional State Central Committee fee is collected from each Republican and Democratic candidate.[5]

    Local trial court elections[edit]

    See also: Louisiana local trial court judicial elections, 2017

    Louisiana held partisan elections for local judicial offices in 2017. A primary election was held on March 25, 2017, and a general election was scheduled for April 29, 2017. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was January 13, 2017.[6]


    State profile[edit]

    Demographic data for Louisiana
     LouisianaU.S.
    Total population:4,668,960316,515,021
    Land area (sq mi):43,2043,531,905
    Race and ethnicity**
    White:62.8%73.6%
    Black/African American:32.1%12.6%
    Asian:1.7%5.1%
    Native American:0.6%0.8%
    Pacific Islander:0%0.2%
    Two or more:1.8%3%
    Hispanic/Latino:4.7%17.1%
    Education
    High school graduation rate:83.4%86.7%
    College graduation rate:22.5%29.8%
    Income
    Median household income:$45,047$53,889
    Persons below poverty level:23.3%11.3%
    Source: U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2010-2015)
    Click here for more information on the 2020 census and here for more on its impact on the redistricting process in Louisiana.
    **Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.

    Presidential voting pattern[edit]

    See also: Presidential voting trends in Louisiana

    Louisiana voted Republican in all six presidential elections between 2000 and 2020.


    More Louisiana coverage on Ballotpedia

    Recent news[edit]

    The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms 'Louisiana supreme court' OR 'Louisiana court election' OR 'Louisiana elections 2017'. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

    See also[edit]

    Louisiana Judicial Selection More Courts
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    Judicialselectionlogo.png
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    Courts in Louisiana
    Louisiana Circuit Courts of Appeal
    Louisiana Supreme Court
    Elections: 20242023202220212020201920182017
    Gubernatorial appointments
    Judicial selection in Louisiana
    Federal courts
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    Local courts

    External links[edit]

    Footnotes[edit]



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