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Home / Wall Street Journal: GOP Candidates Challenging Spitzerism at the PollsWall Street Journal: GOP Candidates Challenging Spitzerism at the Polls
Last Updated on Friday, 1 August 2008 11:00 Written by rslcpol Friday, 1 August 2008 09:09
A closer look at the West Virgina AG race, along with some others. This piece makes credible mention of two GOP AG candidates who could not be further from the Spitzerist mold as AG – Indiana’s Greg Zoeller and West Virginia’s Dan Greear.
From the Wall Street Journal:
It’s also an insight into a new wave of reformist candidates across the country. As state attorneys general have become more brazen with their power, and as outside groups have started shining a light on their backroom practices, voters have become uneasy. It’s this sense of disquiet that candidates like Mr. Greear are tapping into as they promise to refocus lawsuits, rein in the tort bar and restore a sense of justice to prosecutorial office.
In Indiana, Greg Zoeller, the chief deputy for the current attorney general, is running for the top slot and touting the fact his office has never been close to trial lawyers. His opponent, Democrat Linda Pence, is a trial attorney. In Missouri, GOP state Sen. Michael Gibbons is fighting for an open seat and promising transparency in office. In North Carolina, in a strange twist, a pro-business Democrat is defending his seat against a trial-lawyer Republican. Ethics is also figuring in attorney general races in Pennsylvania and Ohio.
To Mr. Greear’s advantage, his opponent is a case study of abuse in office. Mr. McGraw, in more than 14 years as West Virginia’s attorney general, has been a pioneer in the practice of filing questionable lawsuits against big companies, secretly doling out the legal work to outside trial lawyer friends who reap millions in fees. Those lawyers then turn around and donate heavily to Mr. McGraw’s re-election.