“How Prosecutor Elections Fail Us”

For one thing, notes Ronald Wright of Wake Forest, relatively few incumbent D.A.s face serious contests:

Even in those exceptional campaign settings when the incumbent prosecutor faces a challenge and is forced to explain the priorities and performance of the office, elections do not perform well. This article surveys the typical rhetoric in prosecutor election campaigns, drawing on a new database that collects news accounts of candidate statements during prosecutor elections. Sadly, these campaign statements dwell on outcomes in a few high visibility cases, such as botched murder trials and public corruption investigations. Incumbents and challengers have little to say about the overall pattern of outcomes that attorneys in the office produce or the priorities of the office.

2 Comments

  • Hmmm…Jack McCoy.

  • Mike Nifong rings a bell