OPINION

Democrat Appointed Judge McCormick Reassigns Cases After Musk Lawyers Call Foul Over Bias

Dear Friends,

Looking closely at Democrat-appointed Chancery Court Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick removing herself from her Elon Musk cases, it’s important to look at the role of politics in this very visible case. Look at the VOR News story below, which touches on McCormick’s politics and whether she has a politically-motivated grudge against Musk.

I’m pleased to see justice this week and I’m now wondering if her days on the court are numbered. As I see it, after this move by McCormick, it’s fair to say that others may be wondering this now too. 

See the VOR News story below and please share your feedback on this, which is always welcome and appreciated.

Respectfully Yours,

JUDSON Bennett–Coastal Networkhttps://www.vornews.com/news/democrat-appointed-judge-reassigned-from-musk-case-over-bias/

Democrat Appointed Judge Reassigned from Musk Case Over Bias

DELAWARE – A leading Delaware judge has pulled away from key lawsuits against Elon Musk and Tesla. Musk’s lawyers claimed she showed bias through a social media reaction. People see this shift as a step toward fairer trials.

Chancellor Kathaleen St. J. McCormick from the Delaware Court of Chancery announced on Monday, March 30, 2026. She chose to hand off three cases linked to Musk. Even so, she rejected any idea of personal bias against the Tesla leader.

McCormick explained that intense media coverage might harm fair justice. “The Court of Chancery stands bigger than any single judge,” she stated in her order.

Just days before, Musk’s team demanded her full removal. They highlighted her apparent “support” emoji on a LinkedIn post. That post cheered a recent Musk court defeat in California.

Who Is the Judge and Her Key Rulings

Kathaleen McCormick leads Delaware’s business court. Companies flock there for its skill in corporate fights. The Chancery Court draws firms nationwide. She took the bench and handled major Musk cases.

In 2024, for example, she struck down his huge Tesla pay deal. She made him give back billions in stock options. Musk and fans slammed that call.

McCormick pointed out in her latest note that she tossed a Musk suit last year. This shows, she said, no overall grudge against him.

What Sparked It: The LinkedIn Emoji

Last week, Musk’s lawyers filed a motion with a screenshot. It showed McCormick’s apparent support emoji on a post. The post mocked Musk’s $2 billion loss in a Twitter (now X) shareholder fraud case.

The team said this bred a “bias appearance” that hurt the cases. No fair person, they argued, would trust her to stay on.

McCormick fought back. She called the request false. She does not back that post, she said. She also cleared up staff likes on bad Musk posts. Still, to dodge media buzz, she passed the cases to other vice chancellors.

Right after the news, one shareholder dropped his suit.
Cases Shifting to New Judges

These suits now move:
Tesla shareholder suits: They claim Musk favored himself over investors.
Board oversight suits: Tesla directors allegedly ignored Musk’s moves and broke SEC deals.
Derivative suits: Big-stakes claims on Tesla governance and duties.
Investors and lawyers watch closely. These probes CEO power in public firms.

Delaware shapes much U.S. corporate law. Rulings here guide the nation.

Her role sparks talk. Some note her Democratic links in biased chats.

Why Bias Claims Hit Hard in Big Cases

Court fairness anchors U.S. law. Doubts about a judge’s neutrality, especially with stars like Musk, shake trust fast.

Musk gripes about Delaware courts. Post-pay ruling, he floated shifting Tesla’s home state. Fans view the switch as proof that Ushback pays.

Yet critics fear rich players bully judges via the press and social media.

Experts note judges often reassign to dodge bias looks, even without a real slant. McCormick did just that. She guarded the court rep while defending her record.

How Sides Reacted

Musk’s camp cheered via filings. They sought recusal for even odds.

McCormick stressed court-wide neutrality. Extra focus on one judge hurts all, she said. Watchers like her smart move. It keeps cases rolling sans long fights.

That shareholder’s suit drops hints at wider effects.

Online and legal talks turn to social media for judges. Should they quit platforms? Or does one emoji get overblown?

>> Impact on Delaware’s Court Image

Delaware’s Chancery Court boasts top expertise and steady ways. Firms incorporate the theme for that.

Events like this test it. Can rich foes swap judges via claims? Does it hurt trust or boost fairness?

Analysts say it worked. She fixed the issue sans guilt, a dmit. Cases get new views.

>> What’s Next for the Suits

Other vice chancellors take the three cases. Hearings roll on under fresh leadership.

Musk and Tesla battle on governance, pay, and board calls. Tech shareholder push stays firm.

McCormick returns to her load. She stays central in Delaware corp law.

One online nod shows how fast judges face public eyes today. Likes and emojis matter a lot.

Watch Delaware as these suits advance. New judges might shift views or echo old hurdles.

The switch reminds all: courts need real fairness plus no biased hints to keep trust.

The dust-up feeds “activist judge” debates, politics, and social media sway.