ACLU Announces Opposition to Alito Nomination (1/9/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.orgGroup Cites Rising
Concerns Over Unchecked Executive Power and Alito's
Troubling Civil Liberties
Record
NEW YORK -- The American Civil Liberties Union announced today that it will
oppose the nomination of Judge Samuel A. Alito, Jr. to replace Justice Sandra
Day O'Connor on the United States Supreme Court.
"At a time when our president has claimed unprecedented authority to spy on
Americans and jail terrorism suspects indefinitely, America needs a Supreme
Court justice who will uphold our precious civil liberties," said ACLU Executive
Director Anthony D. Romero. "Unfortunately, Judge Alito's record shows a
willingness to support government actions that abridge individual
freedoms." Throughout his career, Judge Alito has promoted an
expansive view of executive authority and a limited view of the judicial role in
curbing abuses of that authority. Two years ago, Justice O'Connor
eloquently expressed what is at stake in these critical times when she wrote: "A
state of war is not a blank check for the president when it comes to the rights
of the nation's citizens."
Romero also noted that Judge Alito has written a series of troubling
decisions on race, religion, and reproductive rights while sitting on the
federal appeals court. These are precisely the issues in which Justice
O'Connor often cast a critical swing vote on a closely divided Supreme
Court. The ACLU vote came after a special meeting of its 83-member
national board this weekend, which has voted to oppose only two nominees in its
86-year history: Justice William Rehnquist (in his initial nomination to the
Court) and former Solicitor General and law professor Robert
Bork. In December, the ACLU issued a 68-page report summarizing
Judge Alito's record on civil liberties and civil rights. The ACLU sent
the report along with a letter expressing "deep concern" to Senate Judiciary
Committee Chairman Arlen Specter and Ranking Member Patrick Leahy, urging the
committee to conduct a thorough review of Judge Alito's record.
"Judge Alito has all too often taken a hostile position toward our
fundamental civil liberties and civil rights," said Caroline Fredrickson,
Director of the ACLU Washington Legislative Office. "The Supreme Court is
the final guardian of our liberties, and Judge Alito has shown that he lacks the
dedication to that commitment. Recent revelations about White
House-sanctioned domestic spying, in defiance of the law, make it clear that the
Senate cannot, and must not, approve this nominee." The ACLU,
founded in 1920, participates in more cases before the Supreme Court than anyone
besides the U.S. government itself.
Read the ACLU
report on Judge Alito's record >>
The
ACLU's letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee is online at www.aclu.org/scotus/2005/23219prs20051223.html The
ACLU's advertisements calling for a special counsel to investigate the
President's illegal surveillance of U.S. citizens are online at www.aclu.org/safefree/spying
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