Commonwealth Court
In the race to fill one open seat on the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, voters selected Judge Stella Tsai, a Democrat and longtime member of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas. Her win preserves a path for Democrats to maintain influence on one of the state’s two intermediate appellate courts.
The Commonwealth Court handles appeals and original jurisdiction cases involving state and local governments, regulatory agencies and election matters, making it a consequential institution for how governance and public-policy disputes are resolved in the commonwealth.
Tsai, born in Harrisburg to immigrant parents from Taiwan, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and Penn Law, and has served as a judge of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas since 2016. She told WHYY News before the election that her background helped mold her desire to become a lawyer and then a judge.
“As a child of immigrants who came from a country that was ruled by a pretty repressive regime that imposed martial arts in 1997, I understood the importance of democracy at an early age,” she said. “And because of that, a lot of my life has been devoted to the issue of voting rights and free and fair elections and making sure that people have the opportunity to participate in this democracy.”
Voters also retained Judge Michael Wojcik, a Democrat who has served on the Commonwealth Court since 2016 and will now serve another 10-year term. Despite their wins, judges elected as Republicans will continue to hold a majority on the court, now 5 to 4.
Superior Court
Democratic Judge Brandon P. Neuman secured victory to fill the open 10-year term on the Superior Court of Pennsylvania. His win marks a modest but meaningful shift in the 15-member appellate bench, which plays a key role in civil, criminal and family law appeals across the commonwealth.
The seat became vacant after former Judge Daniel D. McCaffery ascended to the state Supreme Court in 2023. In the general election, Neuman faced Republican nominee Maria Battista and Liberal Party candidate Daniel Wassmer.
Democrat Judge Alice Beck DuBow also secured a new 10-year term in a separate retention vote.
The Superior Court hears most appeals from the 67 county courts, setting the tone for how law is applied across the state. Neuman’s victory strengthens the Democratic presence on the court, which currently includes eight judges originally elected as Democrats and six originally elected as Republicans. With this win, the partisan balance tilts further in the Democratic direction — a development likely to resonate in cases involving election law and criminal justice reform.
Philadelphia judges
Philadelphia voters completed what had been a largely uncontested judicial cycle: 11 open seats on the Court of Common Pleas and four open seats on the Philadelphia Municipal Court were filled, and all candidates on the Democratic slate prevailed. The outcome affirms the city’s one-party dominance of the bench and underscores how judicial elections in the city continue to be shaped by internal Democratic Party processes rather than competitive partisan battles.
City voters were asked to select 11 new judges to the Court of Common Pleas to fill an equal number of open seats, alongside 13 sitting judges standing for retention. All 11 candidates running for the open seats were Democrats, and each carried the endorsements of the local Democratic Party and the Philadelphia Bar Association, per the voter guide. The slate included Larry Farnese, Kia Ghee, Leon A. King II, Will Braveman, Brian Kisielewski, Irina Ehrlich, Anthony Stefanski, Deborah Watson‑Stokes, Sarah Jones, Joseph J. Russo and Jennifer A. Santiago.
On the Municipal Court side, the four open seats were won by the only four candidates, Democrats Amanda Davidson, Michael Parkinson, Sherrie Cohen and Cortez Patton.
All of the judges running for reelection were also retained.