Governor Pinchot and the Late Magistrate Stubbs1 | American Political Science Review | Cambridge Core (original) (raw)

Extract

Governor Pinchot's appointment of followers of two powerful politicians to the Philadelphia magistracy came at a time when the entire magisterial system was facing the stiffest criticism from the higher courts, the state bar association, and the more alert lay opinion that it has faced since Magistrate Perri was convicted of extortion and bribery in 1929. Philadelphia magistrates from time immemorial have been charged with partisanship, ignorance, and corruption; and the temper of the present times has begun actively and militantly to react against these shortcomings of a judicial system that is steeped in politics rather than pervaded with a spirit of justice.

References

2 For a more detailed discussion of this idea, see my Boss Rule; Portraits in City Politics, to be published by Whittlesey House in April.