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< Return To Hearing
Testimony
of
Prof. Erwin ChemerinskyJanuary 12, 2006 January 12, 2006 Erwin Chemerinsky I am honored to have been asked to testify concerning the nomination of Samuel Alito to be an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court. It is impossible to overstate the importance of this nomination for the immediate future of constitutional law in the United States. Often in considering judicial nominees, the Senate can take refuge in doubt over the impact of a particular nominee. In considering the nomination of Judge Alito, there is no doubt as to the importance of this seat on the Supreme Court or as to Judge Alito's likely impact on the law. I want to focus on one area: separation of powers and specifically checks and balances on executive power. No area of constitutional law is likely to be more important in the years ahead than constitutional challenges to claims of broad executive authority. In recent years, the Bush administration has claimed unprecedented executive power, including the authority to detain American citizens apprehended in the United States as enemy combatants; the power to engage in warrantless eavesdropping of conversations and electronic communications by American citizens with those in foreign countries; the ability to detain enemy combatants indefinitely in Guantanamo, Cuba, without due process; and the power to authorize torture of individuals. Thus, a crucial issue before this Committee must be whether Samuel Alito is likely to examine the claims of executive power critically or whether he is likely to be a virtual rubber-stamp approving executive actions. What is striking about Judge Alito's record is that every available indication of his views - from his memos as a Justice Department lawyer, his speeches, and his judicial opinions - points in one direction: Judge Alito is likely to be extremely deferential to claims of executive power and very unlikely to enforce needed checks and balances. I have carefully reviewed Judge Alito's record and I could find no indication where he wrote a memo, gave a speech, or authored a judicial opinion favoring limits on executive power. My conclusion is that at this point in time, it is far too dangerous to approve someone for the Supreme Court with such a consistent record of strong deference to executive claims of authority. At the risk of saying the obvious, checking executive power was a central goal of the American Constitution. For the framers of the Constitution, executive power was the power most to be feared. Indeed, in their view, reposing virtually all power in a single individual, such as King George III, threatened all liberty. Having endured the tyranny of the King of England, the framers viewed the principle of separation of powers as the central guarantee of a just government. Madison wrote the strict separation of powers was essential to preserve democracy in a republic because: "[n]o political truth is certainly of greater intrinsic value or is stamped with the authority of more enlightened patrons of liberty than that . . . [t]he accumulation of all powers legislative, executive and judiciary in the same hands, whether of one, a few or many, and whether hereditary, self appointed, or elective, may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny." Madison further warned, "[t]he great security against a gradual concentration of the several powers in the same department consists in giving to those who administer each department the necessary constitutional means and personal motives to resist encroachments of the others. The provision for defense must in this, as in all other cases, be made commensurate to the danger of attack." In the past, the Supreme Court has served an essential role in the system of separation of powers by checking executive power and rejecting presidential actions that usurp the powers of other branches of government or prevent them from carrying out their constitutional duties. In cases like Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, which rejected President Truman's effort to seize the steel mills during the Korean War, and United States v. Nixon, which rejected President Nixon's effort to invoke executive privilege to keep the Watergate tapes from being used as evidence in court, the Court imposed essential checks on executive power. A crucial question must be whether Judge Alito will continue this tradition of judicially imposed limits on presidential authority or whether he will be a virtually sure vote for the executive on the important issues likely to come before the Court concerning separation of powers. Samuel Alito's Record on Executive Power But there is nothing in Judge Alito's record to suggest recognition of the need for limits on executive power. Prior to becoming a judge, Alito worked exclusively in the executive branch of government, in the United States Department of Justice: as an Assistant United States Attorney, as Assistant Solicitor General, as Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Counsel, and as a United States Attorney. In these capacities, he repeatedly expressed the need for expansive, unchecked executive power. On some occasions, Judge Alito has dissented from en banc decisions on his Court protecting individual freedoms from government power. For example, Judge Alito dissented from a 9-2 decision of his court holding that notice must be sent by mail to the place where a person is being held and from a 10-1 decision that notice must be reasonably calculated to actually reach the person whose property is being seized.
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Mr. Stephen L. Tober, Esq.
The Honorable Judge Edward Becker The Honorable Anthony Scirica The Honorable Maryanne Trump Barry The Honorable Ruggero Aldisert The Honorable Leonard Garth The Honorable John Gibbons The Honorable Timothy Lewis Ms. Edna Ball Axelrod Prof. Michael Gerhardt Mr. Peter Kirsanow Prof. Samuel Issacharoff Mr. Carter Phillips Prof. Goodwin Liu The Honorable Judge Edward Becker Prof. Nora Demleitner Prof. Erwin Chemerinsky Ms. Beth Nolan The Honorable Charles Fried Prof. Laurence Tribe Prof. Anthony Kronman Mr. Fred Gray Ms. Kate Michelman Prof. Ronald Sullivan, Jr. Prof. Amanda Frost Prof. John Flym Ms. Kate Pringle The Honorable Charles Gonzalez The Honorable Debbie Wasserman Schultz Mr. Jack White Mr. Reginald M. Turner, Jr. Mr. Theodore Shaw The Honorable Russ Feingold |
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