WeVote

Bill

Bill

SB 630

Relating to scholarships for use at participating nonpublic schools.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Daniel Bonham

The bill replaces contested circuit court elections with gubernatorial appointment and 10-year retention votes.

In committee upon adjournment.
0
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SB 630

SB 630 — Circuit Court Judges: Selection and Retention Elections (Maryland)

Status: Hearing (committee) — 2/12 at 1:00 p.m.
Introduced: February 20, 2025
Primary sponsor / Request: Maryland Judicial Conference (Chair, Judicial Proceedings Committee)
Cross-file / Companion: HB 778

Purpose / Intent

SB 630 is a proposed amendment to the Maryland Constitution that changes how judges of the circuit courts are chosen and retained. The bill eliminates contested popular elections for circuit court judges and replaces them with gubernatorial appointment (with Senate confirmation) followed by unopposed retention elections by the voters, and shortens circuit court judicial terms from 15 years to 10 years. The measure aligns circuit court selection/retention with the existing process used for appellate judges.

Key provisions

  • Vacancy filling:
    • All vacancies for circuit court judges are to be filled by gubernatorial appointment with the advice and consent of the Senate.
    • An appointee serves until the next general election that occurs at least one year after the vacancy date; at that election the judge appears on the ballot for a retention (yes/no) vote by voters of the city or county from which the judge was appointed.
  • Retention elections:
    • After the initial retention vote, a retained circuit court judge stands for retention every 10 years (10‑year retention cycle).
    • The judge’s name appears on the appropriate ballot without opposition; voters vote “yes” or “no” on retention.
    • If voters reject retention (or the vote ties), the office becomes vacant 10 days after certification of the returns.
  • Term length:
    • Circuit court judicial term is reduced from 15 years to 10 years.
  • Transitional provisions:
    • Judges who were elected and serving on the amendment’s effective date continue until the end of their elected term or until age 70—whichever comes first; thereafter they would be subject to the new appointment/retention system.
    • Judges who are in office but were not elected to that office as of the amendment’s effective date must be reappointed within 15 days of the amendment’s effective date; thereafter they follow the new selection/retention rules.
  • Technical and conforming constitutional edits:
    • Repeals/selectively amends existing constitutional sections (e.g., repeal of Sections 3 and 5 of Article IV; amendments to Sections 3A, 5A, 11) and adds a limited-duration provision for transitional rules.

Who is affected

  • Current and future circuit court judges in Maryland: selection method, term length, and retention mechanism change.
  • Governor and Maryland Senate: increased appointment and confirmation responsibility.
  • County and city voters: retention-only votes (no contested circuit court judicial elections).
  • Judicial nominating process actors (e.g., nominating commissions) and court-administration entities may see procedural adjustments.

Procedural / timeline notes

  • This is a constitutional amendment proposal: it must be approved by the General Assembly (three‑fifths in each house as required for constitutional amendments) and then submitted to the voters for adoption at the next general election.
  • Fiscal note (Department of Legislative Services): no anticipated state or local fiscal impact.
  • The bill incorporates transitional language governing how sitting judges move from the current system to the new regime.

Potential policy impacts (high level)

  • Ends contested elections for circuit court judges, shifting retention to a model used at the appellate level.
  • Centralizes initial selection power with the Governor (subject to Senate confirmation) and removes direct electoral challengers as a path to the bench at the circuit level.
  • Could affect judicial accountability dynamics, campaign activity, and local electoral engagement over judicial races.
  • Expected to conform circuit court selection to recommendations from the Judicial Council’s Workgroup to Study Judicial Selection.

For more detail: SB 630’s draft amends multiple sections of the Maryland Constitution and includes specific transitional provisions; HB 778 is the designated cross‑file.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

Sign in to ask a question.