November 4, 2010
		Tuesday's big victory in Iowa
The  people of Iowa scored a major victory on Tuesday and have sent a clear  and powerful message across America. The April 2009 Iowa Supreme Court  decision to declare the state’s law banning same sex marriage  unconstitutional was a controversial win for far-left judicial activism  at the expense of the people. Three members of the court learned on  election day that judicial activism has consequences.
The DesMoines Register  reports that Chief Justice Marsha Ternus along with Justices David  Baker and Michael Streit were handed their pink slips by the voters  after Tuesday’s mid-term election. Since Iowa adopted the merit  selection and retention system in 1962 no state Supreme Court justice  had failed to earn the simple majority required for retention.
The  campaign to remove the judges was spearheaded by Sioux City businessman  Bob Vander Plaats and supported by U.S. Congressman Steve King who  crisscrossed the state to rally the electorate. A jubilant Vander Plaas  told supporters “The people of Iowa stood up in record numbers and sent a  message…that it is ‘We the people,’ not ‘We the courts.’”
Exit polls confirmed that the unpopular gay marriage decision was the overwhelming issue regarding the retention vote.
Bernie Noel of Bloomfield said he never voted “no” on a justice  until Tuesday. The 43-year-old said he opted to retain his local  district judges, who “do a great job, and are good people.” But the gay  marriage ruling swayed him against the justices. “I don’t think they  should have the power to change the constitution and take things into  their own hands,” Noel said. “It’s a hard job to do, but here, in this  case, I just really think they overstepped their bounds.”
The remaining  members of Iowa’s Supreme Court will be held accountable to the people  in 2012 (David Wiggins) and 2016 (Mark Cady, Daryl Hecht and Brent  Appel). The people of Iowa have made a stand for all of us who believe  in the sovereignty of the people and the consent of the governed. 




