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Brown appoints 2 Oregon Supreme Court judges in her final days as governor

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, in her office at the state capitol, Feb. 3, 2022, following her final state of the state address. Brown, whose tenure as governor ends in a little more than a week, announced two state Supreme Court appointments Wednesday.
Kristyna Wentz-Graff
/
OPB
Oregon Gov. Kate Brown, in her office at the state capitol, Feb. 3, 2022, following her final state of the state address. Brown, whose tenure as governor ends in a little more than a week, announced two state Supreme Court appointments Wednesday.

When Kate Brown leaves office, she will have appointed every justice on the state鈥檚 highest court. She also announced other judicial appointments Wednesday.

Gov. Kate Brown announced Wednesday she is appointing two justices to the Oregon Supreme Court, making every justice on the state鈥檚 highest court a Brown appointee.

Her announcement also included an appointment to the Oregon Court of Appeals and two appointments to the Multnomah County Circuit Court.

Brown, whose tenure as governor ends in a little more than a week, has appointed 112 judges during her time in office.

鈥淭hroughout my time as Governor, I have sought to appoint highly-qualified individuals with deep connections to their communities, extensive courtroom experience, and professional and lived experiences that are representative of all of Oregon,鈥 Brown said in a press release.

Unlike the federal Supreme Court, justices on Oregon鈥檚 highest court serve six-year terms before facing election. Still, electoral challenges are rare, let alone successful.

Brown鈥檚 efforts have not only remade the state鈥檚 Supreme Court, but will have a lasting impact throughout the judiciary on the state鈥檚 tax, trial and appellate courts.

Since taking office in 2015, she has appointed 56 judges who are women, 55 who are men and one who is non-binary. She has also appointed 27 judges who are people of color, two of whom are Native American and eight judges who openly identify as LGBTQ+.

Brown鈥檚 efforts to overhaul the judiciary started early in her tenure as governor.

Stephen Bushong.
Office of Governor Kate Brown
Stephen Bushong.

鈥淲hen I graduated from law school as a young lawyer, there was one woman on the (Oregon) Supreme Court,鈥 Brown told OPB. 鈥淚t was Justice Betty Roberts. In my entire career, until I became governor, there were never more than two women on a seven-person court. Never more than two. And when I became governor, I changed that immediately.鈥

Brown鈥檚 latest Supreme Court appointments are Stephen Bushong and Bronson James.

Bushong has been a judge on the Multnomah County Circuit Court since 2008 and will fill the position created by Justice Thomas Balmer鈥檚 retirement. Before becoming a judge, Bushong litigated civil cases as an attorney at the Miller Nash law firm and as an attorney with the Special Litigation Unit at the Oregon Department of Justice.

Bronson James
Office of Governor Kate Brown
Bronson James

James has been a judge on the Court of Appeals since 2017 and will fill the spot of Chief Justice Martha Walters as she retires. Before his time on the bench, James was an appellate public defender with the Oregon Office of Public Defense Services and represented injured plaintiffs, as well as criminal defendants at his own firm.

Brown is appointing Megan Jacquot, currently a judge on the Coos and Curry County circuit courts since 2016, to the state Court of Appeals vacancy created by James鈥 moving to the state Supreme Court. Jacquot previously practiced as a juvenile defense attorney and appellate attorney in Coos Bay before becoming a judge. She is an enrolled member of the Chocktaw Nation and will be the first tribal member to serve on an appellate court in the state. Jacquot also serves on the governor鈥檚 Foster Care Advisory Commission.

Bryan Francesconi, currently a public defender, and Rima Ghandour, currently a civil litigator, will fill the two vacancies on the Multnomah County Circuit Court.

One of Brown鈥檚 earlier appointees, , the first Black judge on the state鈥檚 highest court, has been nominated as a federal judicial nominee by the Biden administration and is awaiting approval from the U.S. Senate.

Copyright 2022

Lauren Dake is a politics and policy reporter for Oregon Public Broadcasting, a JPR news partner. Her reporting comes to JPR through the Northwest News Network, a collaboration between public media organizations in Oregon and Washington.