How Dark Money Is Taking Over Judicial Elections

Secretive partisan groups are spending millions to elect their favorite state judges. Can you still get a fair hearing?

| Tue Oct. 28, 2014 6:00 AM EDT

Most people don't think about judicial elections until they find themselves staring at a group of unfamiliar names on the ballot. But judges are selected by voters in 39 states, whether in an initial election or a retention election after being appointed. The explainer below details how special-interest money has increasingly flooded the system over the last several decades—including the first ever set of data on campaign money in lower court races.

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