ACLU Testimony Submitted to the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law
February 11, 2009
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has more than half a million members,
countless additional activists and supporters, and fifty-three affiliates nationwide. We are
one of the nation’s oldest and largest organizations advocating in support of individual
rights in the courts and before the executive and legislative branches of government. In
particular, throughout our history, we have been the nation’s pre-eminent advocate in
support of individual free speech rights. We write today to express our strong support for
legislation to resolve the problem known as ‘libel tourism’. Some say no such problem
exists.1 Those who believe it is a problem don’t necessarily agree on the best approach to
dealing with the issue. The ACLU is less concerned with these differences of opinion
than with upholding the constitutional standards found in the U.S. Constitution against
challenges arising out of foreign laws that fall short of accepted international standards.
We encourage this committee to craft legislation to protect the free speech rights of those
authors and writers entitled to such protection from the chilling effect of foreign laws that
fail to conform to basic international human rights agreements. 
