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Gov. Laura Kelly withdraws appeals court nominee after complaints over tweets

Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly
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TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Posts on a Kansas judge's Twitter feed that included vulgar language and criticism of President Donald Trump prompted Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly to withdraw his nomination Tuesday for the state's second-highest court and raised questions about her vetting process.

Labette County District Judge Jeffry Jack faced a call to resign from his current position from Kansas for Life, a politically influential anti-abortion group. Jack maintained in a statement that his tweets expressed "anti-violence, anti-discrimination and anti-hypocrisy" views and non-partisan personal opinions that do not affect his work on the bench.

Kelly's withdrawal of Jack's nomination for the Kansas Court of Appeals came a day after key Republicans said he would not be confirmed by the GOP-dominated state Senate and four days after the governor announced the appointment. Kelly said she did not know about Jack's tweets beforehand.

The judge's Twitter page includes tweets and retweets from 2017 with foul language or acronyms, some expressing support for abortion rights and gun control. A September 2017 tweet referred to Trump as "Fruit Loops," and another said, "I am so embarrassed that he is our President." The last tweet on his feed was in October 2017.

"Who would ever think that a sitting judge would be participating in this these kinds of communications?" Kelly told The Associated Press. "It never occurred to us."

The problems with the appointment could get messier. Kelly said she will name a new nominee, but Senate President Susan Wagle, a Republican, argued that the appointment now goes to the Kansas Supreme Court's chief justice. A legal battle is possible.

A 2013 law says the governor forfeits the appointment power if she fails to nominate someone within 60 days of a vacancy, which was March 15. However, the same law says the governor can pick another nominee if the Senate rejects one.

Jack's nomination was doomed Monday when Wagle announced she would not support his confirmation. She and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Rick Wilborn, also a Republican, called on Jack to withdraw, and even the committee's top Democrat said he would advise him to drop out.

Wilborn said Tuesday that Jack's tweets were "out of line" for a judge. And Wagle said "liberal judicial activism has no place in Kansas."

Jack, who served in the Kansas House as a Republican, criticized Wagle for opposing his confirmation before he even had a hearing. He said his tweets were "nonpartisan" and added that Wagle was upset because he criticized people "in power" that she supports.

He also said he thought his tweets would be viewed only by his roughly 100 followers and did not understand they were accessible to the public.

"My mistake was in a lack of understanding of Twitter," he said. "I am sorry to Governor Kelly that my ignorance of the mechanisms of Twitter caused her any embarrassment."

Kelly nominated Jack to replace longtime Court of Appeals Judge Patrick McAnany, who retired the day Kelly took office in January. Jack was appointed to the bench in 2005 by then-Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius. He faces a yes-or-no vote in his southeast Kansas judicial district every four years on whether he remains on the bench, and voters retained him in 2008, 2012 and 2016 by an average margin of nearly 70 percent.

He is now registered as an unaffiliated voter, and Kelly said his Twitter feed "doesn't coincide with the conversations we had with Judge Jack."

The withdrawal of Jack's nomination was particularly embarrassing because Kelly took the extra step — not required by law — of appointing a panel of lawyers and non-lawyers to screen applications, interview candidates in public and name three finalists.

"I think her staff let her down," Wilborn said. "I have grandchildren that could have found that in social media."