 Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
  Vol. 81, No. 12, December 
2008
Politics in Civil Jury Selection
A recent analysis of mock trial data 
determined that in assessing damages, factors other than political 
leaning are more useful in predicting if a juror will award large or 
small damage amounts. Read what social-political attitudes are more 
predictive of juror behavior than is party affiliation.
 by Alan M. 
Tuerkheimer
by Alan M. 
Tuerkheimer
 hen lawyers undertake the 
civil-jury selection process, they often look for clues that, they hope, 
will provide insight into a potential juror’s political outlook. 
To many lawyers, a juror’s political perspective 
is so 
important that litigation teams nationwide spend time and resources 
determining whether a prospective juror has donated to or is affiliated 
with a political party. If such an inquiry is fruitless, even more time 
may be spent trying to deduce party identification. Does a certain juror 
have on his car an Obama sticker, a McCain sticker, or any sticker 
indicating candidate preference? When summoned on the first day of 
trial, is a particular juror reading about the virtues of Reaganomics or 
is she more interested in learning about how left-leaning approaches to 
economic stewardship are a recipe for financial success? Does a juror 
appear to be pro-choice, pro-death penalty, anti-tax, anti-government, 
or pro-environment? These inquiries assume that when a person’s 
political compass is revealed, a host of other litigation-related 
attitudes, beliefs, and opinions become evident and will reveal how a 
juror will render a verdict. Especially for attorneys who are involved 
in politics, the most imperative task for providing insight into how 
jurors will assess damages is to determine jurors’ political 
points of view.
hen lawyers undertake the 
civil-jury selection process, they often look for clues that, they hope, 
will provide insight into a potential juror’s political outlook. 
To many lawyers, a juror’s political perspective 
is so 
important that litigation teams nationwide spend time and resources 
determining whether a prospective juror has donated to or is affiliated 
with a political party. If such an inquiry is fruitless, even more time 
may be spent trying to deduce party identification. Does a certain juror 
have on his car an Obama sticker, a McCain sticker, or any sticker 
indicating candidate preference? When summoned on the first day of 
trial, is a particular juror reading about the virtues of Reaganomics or 
is she more interested in learning about how left-leaning approaches to 
economic stewardship are a recipe for financial success? Does a juror 
appear to be pro-choice, pro-death penalty, anti-tax, anti-government, 
or pro-environment? These inquiries assume that when a person’s 
political compass is revealed, a host of other litigation-related 
attitudes, beliefs, and opinions become evident and will reveal how a 
juror will render a verdict. Especially for attorneys who are involved 
in politics, the most imperative task for providing insight into how 
jurors will assess damages is to determine jurors’ political 
points of view.
	Specifically, the thinking goes, the more left-leaning or liberal 
someone is, the more likely it is that the person will be receptive to 
rendering large damage amounts and assigning punitive damages and the 
less likely that he or she will place limits on the amount of money 
juries can award. Conversely, many attorneys believe that if someone 
tilts right, or is more conservative, the person is less likely to award 
money and to support punitive damages and is more interested in 
“tort reform.” During voir dire, and through written 
questionnaires, many attorneys go to great lengths to discern where 
potential jurors fall on the political spectrum so the attorneys can use 
that information to make inferences about how each juror will determine 
appropriate damage awards. 
Mock Trial Data
Given the recent elections and the nation’s attention on the 
political process, Zagnoli McEvoy Foley (Zagnoli), a litigation 
consulting firm in Chicago that conducts mock trials throughout the 
country, analyzed recent mock trial data in an attempt to determine if 
political leaning and damage assessments are intertwined. A total of 476 
mock jurors who identified themselves as either Democrats or Republicans 
were studied. These jurors were participants in mock trials for cases 
involving a personal injury, product liability, or medical malpractice 
claim. Cases in which a corporation sued another corporation were not 
used as part of this analysis. Jurors of all ages, ethnicities, and 
educational backgrounds and from throughout the United States 
participated. Every one of these mock trials involved the prospect of 
rendering damages; jurors would deliberate and subsequently have a 
chance to award money.
	The purpose of a mock trial is to discover jurors’ 
reactions to key facts, strategies, themes, arguments, and damages. Mock 
trials are not designed to accurately predict what the actual verdict 
will be but instead to provide insights, in a simulated, condensed 
setting, that help attorneys prepare for trial. However, with a large 
enough number of participants in a variety of venues, generalizations 
about damage assessments can be made with a high degree of confidence. 
	When mock jurors show up for a focus group, before hearing any 
case-specific information, they fill out a lengthy questionnaire that 
asks basic demographic and opinion questions, simulating what would be 
asked of them during voir dire. One area probed deals with attitudes 
toward lawsuits and jury awards in general. These questions measure how 
jurors feel about awarding damages, including punitive damages, and 
whether they are interested in restricting the amount of money juries 
can award.
	Jurors also are asked about a range of socio-political attitudes. 
These attitudes range from the obvious (for example, do they identify 
themselves as liberal, moderate, or conservative) to the more direct 
(how they planned to vote in the November election) to the more subtle 
(do they feel the government should provide free health care for all 
citizens). All of these variables are looked at in conjunction with 
attitudinal variables on damages, and the actual rendering of damage 
awards, to learn more about the interplay between political attitudes 
and a propensity to award money. The Zagnoli study found that while 
political leaning tends to correlate with what jurors say about 
damages in civil cases, it does not predict whether or how much they 
actually award. In other words, political leaning is related to what a 
juror says but not necessarily to what a juror does; thus, political 
party allegiance should not be too heavily relied on during jury 
selection. The key lesson learned is that other factors prove more 
useful in predicting whether a juror will award large or small damage 
amounts. 
Juror Attitudes about Damages
For purposes of this analysis, jurors were divided according to four 
basic categories of damages, which were determined based on how much 
they actually awarded during a mock trial: no damages, low damages, 
medium damages, and high damages. The first test compared the number of 
Republicans and Democrats in each category, and the results showed no 
significant differences regarding damage awards. In other words, being a 
Republican or being a Democrat did not predict how much was awarded for 
damages. In fact, 22.3 percent of self-described Democrats awarded no 
money damages, while 20.8 percent of self-described Republicans awarded 
no money. This small difference of 1.5 percent is insignificant both in 
the formal statistical sense and from a loosely subjective 
interpretation of the data. Also, 53.2 percent of Democrats were in the 
medium and high categories of damage assessments, while 50.4 percent of 
Republicans were medium- and high-damages jurors – this also was 
not significant. A lawyer using political outlook as a central guide in 
jury selection is leaving more up to chance than she would hope. 
   
		Alan M. Tuerkheimer, U.W. 2000, is a trial 
consultant with Zagnoli McEvoy Foley LLC, Chicago, and is licensed to 
practice law in Wisconsin. He can be reached at atuerkheimer@zmf.com. 	
 
Even though there were no differences in the sums Republicans and 
Democrats actually awarded mock plaintiffs, jurors’ responses to 
certain questionnaire items were more revealing. In other words, there 
is something significant about what jurors have to say about awarding 
damages even if there is nothing significant about what they do. Jurors 
were asked whether they agree or disagree with the idea of placing 
limits on the amount of money juries can award. As might be expected, 
nearly three-quarters (74 percent) of Republicans agreed with that 
statement. A significantly smaller percentage of Democrats, 54 percent, 
agreed with that statement. For a plaintiff’s attorney thinking he 
wants as many Democrats on the panel as possible, the results show 
roughly 6 in 12 Democrats agree with damage caps (although that is lower 
than the percentage of Republicans in favor of caps). But the bottom 
line is that political party affiliation does not predict the size of 
actual damage awards. The actual question, regardless of political 
party, is what is significant and useful during jury selection. 
Importantly, jurors who agreed with damage caps tended to be no- or 
low-damages jurors while those opposed to caps rendered higher amounts 
for damages. 
	This finding shows the importance of targeted follow-up in voir 
dire. Once you learn that a sizeable number of prospective jurors, both 
Republican and Democrat, are in favor of caps on damages, the 
all-important “please tell me why you think that” question 
will reveal crucial information that will enable you to make more 
intelligent use of your allotted strikes. For example, a reticent and 
follower type of juror who is merely parroting another person’s 
opinion about limiting damage awards will likely have a vastly different 
influence on the jury compared to a leader who can clearly articulate a 
firm belief that the entire legal system is broken because of juries 
that get carried away with excessive damage awards. As a 
plaintiff’s attorney, you might be significantly better off 
leaving on the panel a Republican with mild and case-specific views on 
tort reform instead of a Democrat who sees tort reform as necessary in 
all civil cases. Some lawyers may think that discussing tort reform in 
voir dire with one or more jurors will poison the rest of the panel, but 
it is better for a lawyer to hear this information during voir dire than 
during a post-trial interview following a disastrous result at trial. 
	Another item asked of jurors was whether they would consider 
making a defendant pay a plaintiff for various components of damages. 
The mock jurors, when filling out the questionnaire, had a list of 
different damage components for which they could respond 
“yes” or “no.” There were no Republican-Democrat 
differences for the damage categories of pain and suffering, loss of 
enjoyment of life, and loss of consortium (loss of marital relations). 
There were significant differences for fear of future injuries: 44 
percent of Democrats would consider making a defendant pay a plaintiff 
for this category compared to only 28 percent of Republicans. Also, 
Democrats were significantly more likely to consider awarding money for 
emotional distress: 79 percent of Democrats compared to 65 percent of 
Republicans said they would consider awarding money for emotional 
distress. Defense attorneys in medical malpractice cases who are afraid 
of Democrats and comfortable keeping Republicans should be cautious, 
however, because Republicans were more likely than were Democrats to 
consider making a defendant pay damage awards for future medical 
expenses. A closer look shows that a high proportion of Democrats (86 
percent), but an even higher proportion of Republicans (92 percent), 
would consider awarding money for future medical expenses. The message 
is that defense counsel in these cases should not look to party 
identification when picking a jury but instead should figure out a 
better way to impanel low-damages jurors.  
Attitudes about Social-political Issues
As mentioned at the outset, jurors were asked a series of 
social-political questions in addition to ones about party 
identification. These findings are summarized below.
	Regarding voter participation, 99 percent of Democrats and 98 
percent of Republicans in the survey planned on voting in the fall 
presidential election. This is an exceptionally high percentage and not 
likely to mirror the number of jurors who actually voted. What jurors 
say generally is not necessarily fully consistent with what they do in a 
specific situation. 
	When asked whether they plan to vote for a Democrat or Republican 
for president, 90 percent of Republicans said they would vote for a 
Republican while 95 percent of Democrats said they would vote for a 
Democrat. If anything, this was a good indicator that when a juror says 
he is a Democrat or a Republican he means it. 
	In other results, Democrats were significantly more likely to 
believe that the government should provide free health care for all 
citizens. This was a major distinction, with 83 percent of Democrats 
compared to 46 percent of Republicans agreeing. 
	In addition, 26 percent more Democrats than Republicans (87 
percent compared to 61 percent, respectively) were in favor of requiring 
companies to provide health benefits to employees. This last finding 
shows that some markers of political leaning that tend to be associated 
with a certain party (for example, broader and better access to health 
care is more of a Democrat than a Republican priority) are more useful 
in jury selection than is actual political party affiliation. When 
political party is disregarded and this question is viewed by itself, 
the result shows that people who favor mandating that companies provide 
free health care tend to fall into the higher damages categories. 
Conversely, people who oppose the idea tend to be lower on the damages 
spectrum. In this case, political party interacts with a more 
fundamental attitude that is predictive of damage awards, but it is the 
attitude, not the party affiliation, that is crucial to understand 
in 
voir dire. In fact, getting bogged down by political party 
affiliation could cause an attorney to overlook the 
importance of 
key attitudes that are more critical in terms of how a juror will make 
decisions in the case. 
	Jurors also were asked if they agree or disagree with the idea of 
awarding punitive damages. The questionnaire explained that punitive 
damages are meant to punish a company for its mistakes or to send a 
message to similar companies. More than 92 percent of Democrats agreed 
with the idea of awarding punitive damages while 80 percent of 
Republicans agreed with this concept. This is a significant difference, 
but because four-fifths of Republicans agree with punitive damages 
awards, a defense attorney should not feel overly confident simply 
because she has many Republicans on her jury. This is another example of 
how political party is predictive of a certain attitude (toward 
punitives) but is not predictive of the actual rendering of damages. 
This question alone is a good one to ask because, regardless of 
political party, jurors who tend to be in favor of punitive damages 
award higher amounts and jurors who tend to be against punitives are 
from the low- and no-damages categories. 
Conclusion
In the end, excessive reliance on party affiliation in civil jury 
selection is a mistake. While there is a general pro-plaintiff 
inclination among Democrats and a general pro-defendant inclination 
among Republicans, these inclinations tend to be on abstract matters and 
do not correspond with actual juror decisions on damages. Most jurors, 
Republican or Democrat, may hold strong views on a variety of matters 
but they typically will evaluate a lawsuit on a case-by-case basis. 
Reliance on party affiliation alone is superficial and can lead to false 
assumptions about the jury.  
Wisconsin Lawyer