1925 Wisconsin Supreme Court election


The 1925 Wisconsin Supreme Court election was held on Tuesday, April 7, 1925, to elect a justice to the Wisconsin Supreme Court for a ten-year term. The incumbent justice, Burr W. Jones, declined to seek re-election.

Background

A regularly-scheduled election for a full term, the election was part of the spring general election held on April 7, 1925, for a ten-year term on the court. The incumbent judge, Burr W. Jones, first appointed in 1920, declined to seek re-election. E. Ray Stevens defeated John C. Kleist.

Candidates

Campaign

Prior to both of their judicial careers, from 1896 to 1903, the retiring incumbent, Burr Jones, and candidate, E. Ray Stevens, had been law partners in Madison, running the law firm Jones & Stevens. Stevens' campaign advertised endorsements from both of the state's incumbent U.S. senators ; incumbent governor John J. Blaine and former governors Emanuel L. Philipp and Francis E. McGovern. In addition to these Republican state leaders, an endorsement was also touted from Martin L. Lueck. The campaign's advertisements also claimed that each Republican and Democrat in the 57th Wisconsin Legislature had endorsed his candidacy, and also touted supported from "farm and labor, women and soldier organizations."
Kleist, then a lawyer who resided in Milwaukee, had previously served for two-terms as the elected district attorney of Calumet County in the 1880s. He had since his tenure as district attorney run for various judicial and political offices, losing each campaign. He ran several times for seats on the Wisconsin circuit courts in Milwaukee County, but lost all of them. He first ran in 1910 for a Wisconsin circuit court seat but lost to Franz C. Eschweiler. He later was the nominee of the Social-Democratic Party of Wisconsin in the 1911 United States Senate election in Wisconsin. Prior to his 1925 campaign, he had run for the same seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court in 1922, losing to Jones.
During the campaign, The Capital Times described Kleist as being the "candidate of the Ku Klux Klan". In 1924, he had been expelled from the Social–Democratic Party over his alleged ties to the Klan. During his campaign, he was supported by the Anti-Saloon League, which promoted his candidacy in the Wisconsin edition of the The American Issue.