In the divided convention which drafted the Minnesota Constitution, he served as a Democrat and advocated the popular election of judges, a position that was adopted. He said, "if the people are incapable of selecting their judges, they are also incapable of selecting the man who is to appoint the judges."[3]
References
^Porter, Lorle (2005). Politics & peril: Mount Vernon, Ohio in the Nineteenth Century. Equine Graphics Publishing Group. ISBN1-887932-25-9.