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Justices broaden look at term limits

Supreme Court to weigh constitutionality too

CARSON CITY -- The Nevada Supreme Court has decided to take up the issue of whether term limits for state and local officials are constitutional.

The court Wednesday issued an order asking all of the parties involved in the narrow term limits question -- whether those who have served for 12 years in office can run for office one more time -- to respond to the constitutionality question.


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The issue will be heard by the court on July 14.

The court initially had decided to focus only on whether term limits started in 1996 or 1998. If the court agrees with Secretary of State Ross Miller that the 12-year limits started in 1996, then several local officials, among them longtime Clark County Commissioner Bruce Woodbury, would be removed from the ballot for the upcoming elections.

Miller had challenged the right of Woodbury, regents Thalia Dondero and Howard Rosenberg and 18 other local politicians to seek additional terms.

A second term limits challenge is aimed at state lawmakers and asks whether the 12-year limit applies to them too. Candidate Kevin Child has asked the Supreme Court to remove from the ballot the name of Assembly Speaker Barbara Buckley, who first was elected in 1994.

Former Attorney General Frankie Sue Del Papa had issued an opinion that the term limits would not start to apply to legislators until the election in 1998. Several lawmakers running for re-election this year have served 12 years.

The separate cases, scheduled for oral arguments on July 1, have focused only on the issue of when the clock started ticking on the 12-year limit to serve in any single office.

The court has decided to tackle term limits head on, seeking to determine whether they are constitutional.

The order, signed by all seven members of the court, authorizes the Nevada Legislature to weigh in on the term limits question. The order directs the other parties in the term limits challenges, from Buckley to Woodbury to Regent Steve Sisolak, a candidate for commissioner who is challenging Woodbury's right to run again, to respond to the constitutionality question.

Woodbury said in an earlier interview that he has no intentions of challenging the constitutionality of term limits, only their effective date and whether he could run for one more term.

Las Vegas political consultant Sig Rogich, who led the campaign to put the matter before voters more than a decade ago, said he is unsurprised the court has decided to address the constitutionality issue. But Rogich said he would be surprised if the court tossed term limits out in Nevada.

"I will find it very surprising if the Supreme Court told more than 70 percent of Nevada voters that they were wrong," he said. "That would be a ballot box issue that would resonate for a long time."

Members of the Supreme Court must stand for election. One member, Chief Justice Mark Gibbons, is up for re-election this year.

Rogich said there would be no harm if the court used the current challenges to clarify issues about how term limits apply to public office holders. But rejecting them outright would be another matter, he said.

Other state courts, while sometimes modifying the limits, have not tossed them out completely, Rogich said.

The Nevada Supreme Court ruled in 1996 that the term limits question could remain on the ballot. But it separated out term limits for the judiciary and term limits for other state and local elected officials.

Term limits for the judiciary then were rejected by voters in November 1996 but approved for other officials.

Other than that ruling, the court has not addressed the constitutionality of term limits directly, but other states have done so.

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TK wrote on July 18, 2008 01:43 PM: You're either misquoting Rogich or he's wrong. State courts completely tossed out term limits in MA, OR, WA and WY.


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UNLVStud wrote on June 26, 2008 08:33 PM: If the current Supreme Court doesn't want to be voted out next cycle, they'll throw out the term limits "amendment".







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Nancy wrote on June 26, 2008 12:53 PM: Amen Al: Keep the good ones - dump the bad ones and quit trying to limit our choices with artificial timetables and nonsense. Educate yourselves about the candidates and their performance and positions and then VOTE and the rest will take care of itself.


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Al Katraz wrote on June 26, 2008 11:26 AM: I hope that the Supreme Court does indeed rule in favor of the people...the people who are willing to get up off their butts and vote out bad politicians. The court should do the people a favor and dump term limits. I want to be able to keep the good ones who have the experience necessary to do the job well. There are too few as it is, we shouldn't limit our choices.


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william mishler wrote on June 26, 2008 09:54 AM: The Supreme Court members are politician like all the others, so expect them to say term limits are not constitutional. This is no surprise when terms limits go into effect now people want to object to them. What happen to the will of the people? Woodbury and the others have and will continue to receive special treatment. There friends in the court system will do as they are told. Rule against the people and for the politicians. The Judge in Reno did the right thing; the politicians in Las Vegas are down right corrupt. I plan to vote against all incumbents.


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tinytiger wrote on June 26, 2008 09:52 AM: This is such a shame. Woodbury and his buddies will have to be dragged away kicking and screaming. They say they won't fight term limits but that is just what we are doing. I voted for term limits because 12 years is enough. I hope the Supreme Court heard what the citizens said. Otherwise these incumbents will never leave office. Too much power and corruption


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helenweils wrote on June 26, 2008 08:23 AM: This crooked judiciary will find a way to let all of their Democratic buddies continue to run. So typical.


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br wrote on June 26, 2008 07:11 AM: Given the court's record, Woodbury and others will get to run again. They are entrenched enough to spend their time coming up with the next gimmick to stay in office.

I plan to implement my own version of term limits by voting against any incumbent.