Print and Online Subscriptions

The Official Newspaper of Douglas County!

Published May 19, 2010, 12:00 AM

Small town to chief justice: Governor appoints Lorie Skjerven Gildea

Lorie Skjerven Gildea’s first task when she became a Minnesota Supreme Court justice was to hang a photo of Plummer on her office wall.

By: By Don Davis and Andrew Tellijohn, State Capitol Bureau, Alexandria Echo Press

ST. PAUL — Lorie Skjerven Gildea’s first task when she became a Minnesota Supreme Court justice was to hang a photo of Plummer on her office wall.

“It is everything I am,” said the native of the northwest Minnesota town with no stoplights or street signs.

Just 33 were in her high school graduating class but, she once said: “I was a teenager with big dreams.”

Now, as she prepares to become the Minnesota Supreme Court’s chief justice, Gildea has graduated: “I am living the American dream.”

Gildea has been a justice since 2006, after a brief time on the Hennepin County District Court bench, and this summer becomes chief justice. But while she has spent time in Washington, D.C, and now lives in Minneapolis, her 264-population hometown is what drives her.

“You have to depend on your neighbors,” she recalled Thursday, shortly after Governor Tim Pawlenty named her the state’s top judge.

At 48, she is young for a chief justice, but has background as a University of Minnesota lawyer, assistant Hennepin County attorney, lawyer in Washington and an editor of the American Criminal Law Review.

Her University of Minnesota boss, Mark Rotenberg, said Gildea adapted to the big city well and won many difficult cases on behalf of the school.

Rotenberg cited her upbringing as one reason for her success.

“She has many deeply held values that reflect the best of small-town, rural Minnesota folks who believe the best you can do is work hard and be honest,” Rotenberg said. “I think she has those kinds of values and will reflect those on the bench.”

After graduating from the University of Minnesota, Morris, she earned a law degree from Georgetown University in Washington. Gildea graduated with a political science degree from Morris in 1983 and three years ago won the school’s Distinguished Alumni Award.

“The day I decided to attend UMM was one of the best days of my life,” Gildea once said.

While at Morris, Gildea was a perfect 4.0 student.

Her political science studies became important at Morris, where she won the student association president post.

Pawlenty, who first named her a Supreme Court justice in 2006, said that in her time as judge and justice she has “exhibited common sense, a strong intellect and a commitment to the idea that judges should fairly and appropriately interpret the law, not create it themselves.”

In political circles, Pawlenty’s words indicate that he approves of her conservative credentials. Those credentials also apply to her husband, Andy, a long-time Republican operative.

Gildea follows by just a couple of years another northwest Minnesotan as chief justice. Russell Anderson held the job before the current top judge, Eric Magnuson, got the job. Anderson grew up in Bemidji, but spent much of his judicial career in northwest Minnesota courts.

A person who wrote about Gildea said she was a good pick.

Samuel Schuman, former chancellor at Morris, penned a chapter about Gildea in a book he wrote about small colleges, “Old Main: Small Colleges in Twenty-First Century America.”

“Lorie’s parents were hardworking and modestly successful,” Schuman wrote in the book.

She always wanted to be a lawyer, Schuman said.

“With her splendid academic history, this small college alum could have gone just about anywhere to practice law and could have made heaps of money...” “Old Main” reads. “Instead, like most UMM graduates, she came back to Minnesota. And she decided to pursue a career in law in the public sector.”

Schuman noted Gildea’s roots led to her success at Morris and her rise in the legal profession.

“I think her small town origin gives her a firm sense of realism, a lack of pretension and some of her toughness,” Schuman said. “I predict she will be a spectacular success in this new role, and in whatever her future holds.”

Tags:

More from around the web