Mark Pazniokas of "The CT Mirror" reports as follows:
"It happened to Lowell P. Weicker Jr. in 1994, John G. Rowland in 1996 and M. Jodi Rell in 2010: Those governors faced outcries for failing to include a single black lawyer in large classes of Superior Court nominees.
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, whose latest nominees await confirmation votes by the General Assembly before it adjourns June 3, is the first Connecticut governor in two decades to avoid controversy over judicial diversity.
Thirty percent of the 47 judges Malloy has nominated to the Superior Court since taking office in 2011 have been minorities, twice the percentage of those named by his immediate predecessors, Rell and Rowland.
The higher percentage of minority lawyers being named to the bench reflects Malloy’s commitment to diversity, but also nearly two decades of effort by the judiciary and legal profession to demystify the process and broaden the pool of potential judicial candidates..."
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This has nothing per se to do with your article-of-knowledge published here, but Catherine I have to ask you....where in all the extremely helpful and enlightening library of enormously helpful articles you publish, or re-publish, is Connecticut's ACLU?
ReplyDeleteI don't see the absolute necessary connection with them (ACLU)...yet all the 'news', articles, and certainly now the new USDOJ CT TASK FORCE ON PUBLIC CORRUPTION - with billboards going up in CT to boot to report same by the public....my question is WHERE IS THE CT ACLU?
If you know, or can comment your knowledge, please do so. Some of us would like to pursue that path as well.
Thank you. Keep up the great site!!!