When you're in a state with four law schools full of professors who spend their lives studying justice, an active and engaged bar, a judiciary acutely aware of what can happen when judicial elections get out of hand, and a
Chief Justice determined to keep an underfunded court system working, why do you feel the need to
hand over one side of the judicial retention debate to a
man who earns his keep as the CEO of a chain of fast food joints owned by his
political sugar daddy?
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