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Nominees gird for high-court campaign

HARRISBURG (AP) Lansford native and Superior Court Judge Christine Donohue is one of six Supreme Court nominees picked from a field of a dozen candidates, setting the stage for a high-stakes, big-spending showdown that could flip partisan control of the state's highest court for the first time in six years. They will square off in the Nov. 3 general election for the three open seats.

In Tuesday's statewide primary, Republicans and Democrats nominated all the party-backed candidates for an unprecedented three openings on the state's top court.Democrats nominated Philadelphia Judge Kevin Dougherty and Superior Court Judge David Wecht, who both were backed by the state party, but also Donohue, who wasn't.Receiving the Republican nod were Superior Court Judge Judy Olson, Adams County Judge Mike George and Commonwealth Court Judge Anne Covey, who all carried the GOP state committee's blessings.Voters also settled a pair of Democratic nomination contests for the Superior and Commonwealth courts, the state's two intermediate-level appellate courts.For one contested open seat, a Philadelphia judge was nominated by Democrats to run for a spot on the statewide Superior Court, while voters bucked the party's endorsement and nominated a former Allegheny County solicitor to run for a Commonwealth Court seat.Philadelphia Judge Alice Beck Dubow beat Allegheny County Judge Robert Colville, who had vowed not to accept any campaign donations, in the race for the party's Superior Court nomination. And Pittsburgh lawyer Michael Wojcik, a former Allegheny County solicitor, defeated Scranton labor lawyer Todd Eagen for the party's Commonwealth Court nomination.Dougherty, 55, waged a statewide TV advertising blitz with $1.4 million raised mainly from labor organizations, lawyers and businesses. His brother is the business manager of the Philadelphia local of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, which has been a generous supporter.Wecht, 52, whose office is in Pittsburgh, trailed Dougherty in fundraising with $900,000 in contributions. The former Allegheny County judge is the son of pathologist Cyril Wecht, whose inquiries into the deaths of well-known figures such as Elvis Presley gained him national fame.Donohue, 62, was elected to the Superior Court in 2007 following a 27-year career as a lawyer in Pittsburgh. She had sought a party endorsement but failed to muster the required two-thirds majority of the Democratic State Committee. Her campaign raised $339,000 but, unlike Dougherty and Wecht, she spent none of it on TV and relied on direct mail to get out her message.Olson, 57, is from the Pittsburgh area. She spent 24 years as a lawyer and had a brief stint as an Allegheny County judge before being elected to the Superior Court in 2009. Her campaign raised $119,000.George, 56, was a prosecutor before he was elected a judge in 2002. He was the most successful fundraiser among the Republicans, thanks to a $500,000 contribution from a businessman friend that pushed his total to $590,000.Covey, 55, spent 24 years in private practice before she was elected to the appellate bench in 2011. Her public profile was boosted by her handling of a lawsuit stemming from the Jerry Sandusky child sex abuse scandal that was settled after the NCAA withdrew the last of its sanctions against Penn State.All the candidates emphasized the need for ethics reform in the judiciary.Two of the open seats are the result of resignations by disgraced justices a Republican convicted of corruption for using state-paid staff to do political work and a Democrat implicated in a pornographic email scandal. The other vacancy resulted from the retirement of former Chief Justice Ronald Castille after he reached the mandatory retirement age of 70.Supreme Court justices are elected to 10-year terms and receive annual salaries that are currently $203,409. Superior and Commonwealth court judges currently earn $191,926.

Donohue