
high school’s co-valedictorian, then a Rhodes Scholar and a law
professor at the
Now he’s under attack on
Liu, the son of Taiwanese immigrants, is attracting
far more attention than most judicial nominees. While his backers are
excited by his solidly liberal credentials, some of his opponents fear
that President
“He’s by far the most controversial nominee that Obama has named and he’s clearly being groomed for the
executive director of the conservative Committee for Justice. “Look, he
was picked because he’s a darling of the left, and that’s exactly the
reason conservatives are up in arms about him.”
Liu, now the associate dean of the law school at
Liu has advocated many liberal causes, supporting
national health care, affirmative action, gay marriage and slavery
reparations. He angered conservatives by testifying against
He’s alarmed opponents by arguing that the Constitution should be
interpreted based on “the evolving norms and traditions of our
society,” which conservatives say is code for judicial activism. His
opposition to the death penalty drew fire from 42 of
Liu’s record isn’t universally liberal: He’s backed
charter schools and private school vouchers, which are opposed by
teachers unions. He’s received words of praise from conservatives such
as
Republicans are ready to make things tough for Liu.
While promising to withhold final judgment on the nominee,
“It seems to me that his judicial philosophy does
not respect the American ideal of judges as neutral arbiters of the
law,” Sessions said. “I hope my initial impressions are wrong.”
Liu is refusing all media interviews before his confirmation hearing.
He has plenty of supporters willing to speak for him, however.
“We need an Asian-American on the 9th Circuit bench. We need
Liu, 39, has already attracted a national following.
Eng said that more than 400 “Goodwin hearing parties” were scheduled
last month in anticipation of Liu’s appearance before the Judiciary
Committee. Republicans used procedural tactics to delay that hearing.
Liu, the child of two physicians, was born in
While it’s common for a president to tap an appellate court judge as a
nominee, Liu would stand out among the nearly 175 judges because of his
relatively young age. His supporters say that appointing him after a
short tenure on an appellate court would give Obama a chance to shape
the
Levey predicted that the confirmation fight over Liu
will be the biggest battle involving a lower-court judge this year. He
said he wouldn’t be surprised if it’s a preview of an even bigger
battle down the road.
He noted, however, that Liu has “zero courtroom experience” and shouldn’t be rushed into a judgeship.
“Normally, you wouldn’t rush someone along — unless
there was a reason,” Levey said. “And the reason is they’re clearly
grooming him for the
office. … Obama has already signaled that he likes to make
demographically sexy picks. I think he’d love to appoint the first
Asian.”
For their part, Liu’s supporters are focused on the present, saying it would be wrong to focus on what may be in the offing.
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(c) 2010, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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