No- a judge's job is to uphold the law and to pass sentence (or not, as the case may be) with complete impartiality. The laws that he or she may have to uphold are passed by political consensus- but this does not mean that the judge in question may agree with them. They thus have to balance their own knowledge of what is basically, humanly right with what the law decrees, and pass sentence in accordance with these two factors. It's a tricky balancing act.
The most senior judges can hold seats in the House of Lords, but not because they have alliegance to any political party- simply because their jobs have given them insights into wisdom, social knowledge and the way the world works.
The political views of a judge doesn't determine the decisions that they make. A judge is not asked what political party they belong to and decisions are based on law not political views.
ref
There is little surviving evidence to judge Rome's accomplishments in the field of music.
Marksman, starter, timekeeper, track judge, field judge.
political pressure
REPUBLICAN
- There are 22 players on the field, 11 from each team. - There are 7 officials on the field (i). Referee (ii). Umpire (iii). Head linesman (iv). Line judge (v). Field judge (vi). Side judge (vii). Back judge. Source: coachtube.com/courses/football
an official who enforces the rules at a football game or a track and field meet
It is believed that Mike Judge might be a Conservative Libertarian, but he has been reluctant to disclose his political affiliation.
democrat
Field Judge
There are seven on field officials in an American football game: referee, umpire, head linesman, line judge, side judge, field judge, back judge. Click on the 'NFL Officials' link on this page to read about the duties that each official has during a game.