Michigan Judicial Selection: Elections, Appointments, and Retention

Michigan fills judicial vacancies through a hybrid framework that combines partisan primary nominations, nonpartisan general elections, and gubernatorial appointment — a structure established under the Michigan Constitution of 1963 and administered across the state's five court tiers. This page covers the selection mechanisms for each court level, the appointment power exercised by the Governor, and the retention rules that govern sitting judges through electoral cycles. Understanding how judges reach and remain on the bench is essential for practitioners, litigants, and researchers navigating Michigan's legal system.

Definition and scope

Michigan judicial selection refers to the constitutional and statutory processes through which judges are nominated, elected, appointed, or retained across the Michigan court system structure. The controlling authority is Article VI of the Michigan Constitution of 1963, which establishes distinct pathways depending on the court level. The State of Michigan's Bureau of Elections, housed within the Department of State, administers the electoral components of these processes.

Scope and limitations: This page covers state judicial offices within Michigan — specifically the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Circuit Courts, District Courts, and Probate Courts. It does not address federal judicial appointments in Michigan (which follow Article III of the U.S. Constitution and U.S. Senate confirmation procedures) or tribal court selection mechanisms under Michigan tribal law and sovereignty. Municipal judges, where they exist through special local acts, operate under provisions not uniformly addressed here.

How it works

Michigan uses three distinct selection mechanisms, depending on court level and circumstance.

1. Nonpartisan General Election (Standard Pathway)

Judges on the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Circuit Court, District Court, and Probate Court are formally elected on a nonpartisan ballot in November general elections. However, the path to that ballot differs by court:

2. Gubernatorial Appointment (Vacancy Pathway)

When a mid-term vacancy arises — through death, resignation, retirement, or removal — the Governor appoints a replacement under Article VI, §23 of the Michigan Constitution. The appointed judge serves until the next general election in which a successor can be elected to complete the unexpired term. This authority creates a significant pipeline: appointed judges frequently run as incumbents with a structural advantage in subsequent elections.

3. Retention Through Re-election

Michigan does not use a Missouri Plan-style retention vote. Judges seeking continued tenure must run in contested elections on the standard electoral cycle. There is no separate "retention ballot" where voters choose only yes or no — all judicial candidates, including incumbents, compete against challengers under standard ballot procedures.

Common scenarios

Mid-term vacancy on the Supreme Court

If a Supreme Court justice resigns with 3 years remaining on an 8-year term, the Governor appoints a replacement. That appointee serves until the next general election, at which point the seat appears on the ballot for the remainder of the original term. The appointed justice may seek election to that partial term and, if successful, subsequently seek a full 8-year term.

Contested Circuit Court primary

A Circuit Court candidate must first survive a partisan primary. Two Democrats and two Republicans file for a single open seat. The top vote-getter from each party advances to the November general election ballot, where the race is formally nonpartisan — meaning no party label appears beside either candidate's name. Voters unfamiliar with the primary results see only names.

Court of Appeals convention nomination

Candidates for the Court of Appeals bypass a public primary. The Michigan Democratic Party and the Michigan Republican Party each nominate candidates through internal convention processes, subject to party rules and the Michigan Election Law (MCL Chapter 168). Independent or third-party candidates face different petition thresholds to reach the general ballot.

Appointment of a District Court judge

A District Court judge in a 61st District Court seat retires mid-term. The Governor receives applications, typically reviewed with input from local bar associations, and appoints a replacement. The appointee faces voters at the next available general election to fill the unexpired term.

Decision boundaries

Several structural boundaries define what this selection framework does and does not determine:

The broader context for how these judicial selection rules fit within Michigan's constitutional and statutory framework is accessible through the site index, which maps the full range of legal reference content for the state.

References

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