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CAC Letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee in support of Goodwin Liu

Thursday, April 22, 2010

On April 22, 2010, Constitutional Accountability Center sent a letter to the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary in support of President Obama's nomination of Professor Goodwin Liu to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Read the text below or click on the link to see the letter in its entirety. 

April 22, 2010

Senator Patrick Leahy  
Chairman, Senate Judiciary Committee  
United States Senate  
Washington, D.C.   20510  
  
Senator Jeff Sessions  
Ranking Member, Senate Judiciary Committee  
United States Senate  
Washington, D.C.  20510  
  
  Re:   Goodwin Liu  
  
Dear Chairman Leahy and Senator Sessions:  
  
We are writing on behalf of Constitutional Accountability Center (CAC), a publicinterest law firm, think tank and action center dedicated to fulfilling the progressive promise ofthe Constitution's text and history, to state CAC’s strong support for the confirmation ofGoodwin Liu to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. As demonstrated byhis exceptional record of accomplishments, his “well qualified” rating by the American Bar Association, and his testimony at his confirmation hearing on April 16, Professor Liu isoverwhelmingly qualified to sit on the Court of Appeals. We urge that the Senate quicklyconfirm him.

Most important from CAC's perspective as an organization dedicated to theConstitution's text and history, Professor Liu testified that the “the original meaning and ofcourse the text of the Constitution” are critical in every constitutional case and that, in many cases, these sources can be determinative. Professor Liu also responded to critics who havesuggested that he believes in a “living” Constitution not only by making it clear that this is nothow he views our Nation’s charter, but also by expressly stating that the Constitution is not“malleable.”

Professor Liu is not only a brilliant and accomplished legal scholar and teacher, he is alsosomeone who plainly understands the difference between being a scholar and being a judge.As Professor Liu testified, it is the job of a legal scholar to think and write creatively about the law, but it is the job of a judge to follow precedent, the law, and the Constitution, and toresolve controversies in an impartial and objective manner. Professor Liu’s articulate andrestrained testimony should have put to rest unfounded concerns that, as a judge, he could notbe counted on to be faithful to the law and the Constitution as written.

Professor Liu has demonstrated that he has the qualifications, the intellect, thetemperament, and the commitment to fidelity to the rule of law to serve with great distinctionon the Ninth Circuit. We urge every Senator to support his confirmation.

Respectfully,  

Douglas T. Kendall   
President  
  
Judith E. Schaeffer  
Vice President