Liu Nomination to 9th
Circuit "Causing a Firestorm on Capitol Hill"
Part Two of Three
By Dave Andrusko
Republican opposition to
the nomination of Goodwin Liu for a seat on the 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals is deep and wide. But the flashpoint for Sen.
Jeff Sessions, the ranking member on the Senate Judiciary
Committee, is his insistence that Liu omitted a number of
controversial writings in his Senate questionnaire.
To no avail Sessions
(R-Al.) asked Committee Chair Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) to
postpone next week's scheduled hearing, charged, "Goodwin Liu's
entire record consists primarily of a stunning series of
writings and speeches--and yet he failed to disclose dozens of
those writings and speeches to the Judiciary Committee."
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Goodwin Liu |
He added in a letter sent
to Leahy, "At best, this nominee's extraordinary disregard for
the Committee's constitutional role demonstrates incompetence;
at worst, it creates the impression that he knowingly attempted
to hide his most controversial work from the Committee."
For the nominee's part,
the Washington Post reported that on Tuesday, "Liu sent
117 items to the committee, a 'supplement' to an earlier
questionnaire he filled out about his record, including articles
he wrote and events in which he participated, but did not
include in his original submission."
If you read even some of
what Liu has written or said at forums, you are not going to
mistake him for a Chief Justice John Roberts clone. In fact, Liu
wrote an op-ed just after Roberts was nominated in which he
unceremoniously tore into him.
In a July 22, 2005, column
for Bloomberg, Liu began with what is proving to be
heavily ironic, coming from a man whose own nomination has
created a firestorm.
"Despite his mild manner
and Midwestern charm, the nomination of John G. Roberts Jr. to
the Supreme Court is a seismic event that threatens to deepen
the nation's red-blue divide," Liu wrote. "Instead of choosing a
consensus candidate to replace Justice Sandra Day O'Connor,
President George W. Bush has opted for a conservative
thoroughbred who, if confirmed, will likely swing the court
sharply to the right on many critical issues."
For pro-lifers, the two
most relevant comments were criticisms of Roberts for not
supporting "abortion rights." Under the section titled "Roberts'
Record," Liu opines, "What we already know from Roberts's record
is cause for concern. His legal career is studded with
activities unfriendly to civil rights, abortion rights, and the
environment."
Later, discussing Roberts'
role "As a high-ranking lawyer in the Justice Department in the
first Bush administration," Liu wrote, "Roberts also co-wrote
the government's brief in a 1991 case where the Supreme Court
upheld regulations banning federally funded health clinics from
providing abortion-related counseling."
In case anyone missed
where Liu is coming from, he added, "Although Roe v. Wade's
guarantee of a woman's right to choose abortion was not at issue
in the case, Roberts's brief argued: 'We continue to believe
that Roe was wrongly decided and should be overruled.' The
Supreme Court reaffirmed Roe in 1992.'"
Leahy dismissed Sessions,
saying, "Committee members will have had more than seven weeks
to review the nominee's record, and two weeks to review the
materials submitted to the committee on April 5." He added, "I
see no reason to further delay this nominee's opportunity to
appear before the committee and respond to the questions its
members may have."
It's worth noting by way
of a final observation that Liu makes no bones about his fervent
belief not only in an activist court but also that judicial
intervention in order to right what he sees as a societal wrong
is a moral imperative.
At one forum he told a
sympathetic audience, "You know I paid the $9.95 for my
high-speed Internet access to the hotel and went on The
Federalist Society website last night. Now The Federalist
Society will tell you that one of its core principles is that
the job of judges is to say what the law is and not what is
should be.
"Do not believe it."
Please visit
www.nationalrighttolifenews.org. Send your thoughts
and comments to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you'd like, follow me on
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Part Three
Part One |