LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Arkansas' Supreme Court and its chief justice are publicly feuding, days after she was sworn into office, over who has the authority to fire the court's top officials.
Chief Justice Karen Baker on Wednesday voided an order five members of the seven-justice court issued last week blocking her attempts to fire several top officials. Baker, who was sworn in on Jan. 1, accused the majority of trying to usurp her power.
''The constitutional office of the Chief Justice is an elected position for a reason,'' Baker wrote. "I am the people's choice for Chief Justice — not any of the associate justices, whether together or separate."
The court's five-member majority on Wednesday night dismissed the order, saying it had no legal impact.
''We respect our colleague's right, like any other justice, to issue a dissent, and we note that it has no legal effect beyond that of a dissenting opinion,'' the justices said in a written statement.
The court's conservative majority last week issued an order reversing Baker's attempts to fire the head of the Administrative Office of the Courts and several other officials, including the court's police chief. The court said the AOC director's hiring and firing required the support of at least four members of the seven-member court.
Baker and Justice Courtney Goodson did not participate in the court's order on Friday.
Baker said the move went against an earlier order issued by her predecessor, former Chief Justice Dan Kemp, issued in 2017. State law gives the chief justice power to nominate the director of the Administrative Office of the Courts, who serves at the pleasure of the court.