Kansas Reflector
A Kansas Supreme Court appointment — and process — that Kansans can be proud of
August 13, 2025
Kansans can congratulate themselves. A vacancy on the state Supreme Court has once again been smoothly filled through an orderly process Kansans voted to put into our state constitution in 1958. At its heart, the process requires selection of the court’s justices based on their merit, not politics. As the final step in that process, last week Gov. Laura Kelly appointed attorney Larkin Walsh. She became the 29th justice appointed on merit since Kansans chose it 67 years ago.
I have known Walsh for 15 years. She is an outstanding choice, blessed with experience ranging from working as a research attorney for both the federal court and the Kansas Supreme Court (where I worked with her) to representing clients in complex court cases. She brings with her a strong work ethic and absolute commitment to the rule of law.
It is important to remember how Walsh got here. Along with thousands of other Kansas lawyers and judges, she received notice of a Supreme Court vacancy. In response to this opportunity offered equally to so many, Walsh applied to be a justice — as did 14 others.
The next steps in the selection process were created by the voter-approved constitutional amendments and involve the Supreme Court Nominating Commission. Because an applicant’s merit-based selection as a justice essentially means competition with the other applicants, the commission must thoroughly vet them all.
That commission of nine members from across the state reviewed the applications of Walsh and her 14 competitors, investigated them and interviewed them in full public view. At the end of this step in the selection process, the commission members elected Walsh and two other applicants — both judges — as their nominees. The commission then forwarded these three names to Kelly for making her appointment as the last step of the competitive, merit-based selection process.