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Goodwin Liu: Obama’s Most Radical Judicial Nominee

It is difficult to imagine the Ninth Circuit as any more radically liberal than it already is. Despite a few stellar judges, the Court is full of liberal activists who have earned it the reputation of having the highest Supreme Court reversal rate of any court in the nation.  But, with his latest judicial nominee, President Obama just may do what seemed impossible.

There are many red flags in the judicial record of Ninth Circuit nominee Goodwin Liu, who is Associate Dean at the University of California Berkeley Law School.  Here are just a few highlights.

In another article, he stated that “negative rights against government oppression” and “positive rights to government assistance” have “equal constitutional status” because “both are essential to liberty.”

Unfortunately for Liu, our Constitution’s Framers disagree.  They recognized that these two concepts are indeed mutually exclusive: if we allow the government to “assist us” by giving it a redistributive power over our personal property and the power to control health care, education, etc., individual liberty will necessarily erode. Indeed the Framers sought to prevent such redistribution by limiting government’s power and providing what Liu considers as “negative” property rights.  These protections have already been eroded by activist judges, and it is clear that Liu would like to erode those protections still further.

Reasonable people can disagree on death penalty policy, but it is not up to judges to determine that policy or undermine it through judicial obstruction.  The American people decide through the democratic process whether their respective states will utilize the death penalty.  The judge’s role in capital habeas corpus cases in the federal court of appeals system is predominantly to assure that grave errors were not made in the process—the questions of guilt or innocence and sentencing are reserved first and foremost for juries and are decided by multiple state and federal appeals before a federal appeals court judge takes a first look at the case.  But too many activist federal court of appeals judges treat death penalty cases like they are hearing them de novo—like it is their job to put themselves in the place of the jury, so that they can impose their own preferences, rather than simply review for actual legal errors.  Given Mr. Scheidegger’s warning, there is little doubt that Liu would be just this sort of judge.

Liu’s other writings also make clear that he would impose racial preferences directly if he could.

Many pundits are speculating that the Ninth Circuit may be Liu’s stepping stone to the Supreme Court.  If this is the case, he could potentially be one of the most activist justices the High Court has seen yet.  Even the Washington Post admits that Obama’s other federal nominees have been “more moderate” than Liu.

Liu’s confirmation hearing before the Senate is tomorrow.

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