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Judicial Nominations In the Internet Age

Hugh Pickens writes "Chris Good writes in the Atlantic that nominees to the Supreme Court and other high-profile positions are required to provide the Judiciary Committee with everything they've ever written or said publicly, to the best of their abilities within reason. Thanks to the Internet, the last major judicial nominee reported out by the Senate Judiciary Committee, Ninth Circuit nominee Goodwin Liu, included links to YouTube videos of lectures and talks he gave, 573 pages of public writings, news articles about him, syllabi from courses he taught, and statements about legal issues. Even so, Liu was admonished for failing to fully disclose his writings and public speeches to senators, including appearances at such occasions as brown bag lunches and alumni gatherings. 'In preparing my original submission, I made a good-faith effort to track down all of my publications and speeches over the years,' wrote Liu. 'I checked my personal calendar, I performed a variety of electronic searches, and I searched my memory to produce the original list. But I have since realized that those efforts were not sufficient.' Not so long ago, entire news articles in local papers could go wholly unnoticed, by both the nominee and committee members and staff, but not so in the era of the Internet. 'Imagine what will happen when, decades from now, a president nominates someone to the Supreme Court who had access to Twitter, MySpace, and Facebook at the age of 15.'"

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  1. Re:This is a good thing by timeOday · · Score: 1, Troll

    If by "better qualified" you mean being a silver tongued bastard who has an innate ability to always say what's politically expedient.

    Follow that strategy, and you'll get Jon Stewart playing videotapes of you saying one thing and then the other. I think the biggest problem of instant retrieval of everything is just the opposite - never being allowed to change without being called a flip-flopper. Of course, there will never be consensus on when principle and determination go too far and become self-denial and stubbornness.