The son of Taiwanese American immigrants, Liu attended Stanford University before graduating from the University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar and then Yale Law School. On February 24, 2010, President Barack Obama nominated Liu to fill a vacancy on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.[4] For more than a year, Liu's nomination was delayed amid significant opposition from Republicans in the U.S. Senate.[5] On May 19, 2011, the Senate failed to invoke cloture on Liu's nomination with the necessary supermajority in a 52–43 vote,[6] and on May 25, 2011, Liu informed President Obama that he was withdrawing his name from consideration to the seat on the Ninth Circuit.[7]
On July 26, 2011, Governor Jerry Brown nominated Liu to a seat on the Supreme Court of California, succeeding Associate Justice Carlos R. Moreno.[8] Three days later, President Obama formally notified the Senate that he was withdrawing Liu's nomination for the federal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.[9] Liu was sworn into the California Supreme Court on September 1, 2011.[10]
Early life and education
Liu was born in Augusta, Georgia, to a Taiwanese American family.[11] His parents, Wen-Pen (劉文彬) and Yang-Ching Liu (蔡洋清), were Taiwanese doctors who immigrated to the United States from Taiwan as part of a program that recruited physicians in primary care to practice in rural areas.[12] At the age of three, Liu moved with his family to Clewiston, Florida, and he learned English for the first time while attending school rurally.[a] In 1977, they relocated to Sacramento, California, where he attended public schools.[11] He performed well academically and joined the Cub Scouts in fourth grade.[14]
After high school, Liu studied biology at Stanford University with the intent to enter medical school.[14] He received multiple distinguished awards as an undergraduate,[b] was elected co-president of the student body,[18] and worked as a reporter for The Stanford Daily.[14] While reporting on hate speech codes for the school newspaper as a freshman, he consulted with Stanford Law professor Gerald Gunther, who invited Liu to his office. Liu recalled that Gunther "talked about Nazism. He talked about societies that are far less free than ours. That was an amazing experience."[14]
So what's the lesson here? Is it that law students and young lawyers should be careful — careful about what you write, careful about what you say, careful about taking a position for fear of losing a future opportunity? Well, let me tell you, I have certainly said things, written things, that I later regretted. I have made mistakes I wish I could erase. We all have. But it would be wrong to conclude that the best way to go about life is to just play it safe.
On February 24, 2010, President Obama nominated Liu to a new judgeship seat on the Ninth Circuit created by the Court Security Improvement Act of 2007; which became effective on January 21, 2009. His nomination was filibustered by Republicans in the Senate and expired with the sine die adjournment of the 111th Congress.[26] He was renominated to the same position on the first full day of the 112th Congress.[27][28] On April 7, 2011, the Senate Judiciary Committee reported his nomination to the floor of the Senate by a party-line 10–8 vote.[29]
However, Liu's nomination was harshly criticized by Senate Republicans for allegedly failing to disclose 117 of his more controversial writings and speeches.[30] On April 6, 2010, Liu submitted the 117 requested items to the committee as a supplemental to the original questionnaire.[31] The committee hearing had been postponed twice particularly due to Republican opposition to Liu's judicial qualifications and record.[32] Liu defended his writings as a scholar by saying that "there's a clear difference between what things people write as scholars and how one would approach the role of a judge".[33] On April 6, 2010, a letter was sent to the Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy by the seven committee Republicans to request a third postponement, which was subsequently rejected.[34] Liu was also criticized for lack of trial-level experience. Prior to his nomination, Liu had not served as a judge and had argued only one case at the appellate court level as a lawyer.[35]
Liu's criticism of Chief Justice John Roberts and especially his statement during Samuel Alito's Supreme Court nomination[36] was targeted by Senate Republicans as proof of his lack of judicial temperament and partisanship. Liu later apologized and said that his words were "unduly harsh".[37]
On May 17, 2011, Senator Harry Reid filed a cloture motion on Liu's nomination.[38] On May 19, 2011, the Senate rejected cloture in a mostly party-line vote of 52–43, with all but one Democrat (Ben Nelson) voting in favor of cloture and all but one Republican (Lisa Murkowski) voting against.[6] He became the first Obama judicial nominee to be successfully filibustered in the Senate.[39] With the makeup of the Senate unlikely to change until after the 2012 election, Liu withdrew his name from consideration on May 25, 2011. On July 29, 2011, three days after California Governor Jerry Brown nominated Liu to a seat on the Supreme Court of California, President Obama formally notified the Senate that he was withdrawing Liu's nomination for the 9th Circuit.[9] In a talk before The City Club of Cleveland on February 22, 2013, Liu commented that the confirmation process is "inherently a political process" and "the Constitution was designed to make it a political process." He noted, however, that the problem with the confirmation process is that it has become transformed into requiring 60 votes as opposed to a bare majority, which was not part of the Constitutional design.[40]
California Supreme Court
On July 26, 2011, California Gov. Jerry Brown nominated Liu to a seat on the Supreme Court of California.[41] In submitting his nomination, Brown said that "[Liu] is a nationally recognized expert on constitutional law and has experience in private practice, [in] government service and in the academic community. I know that he will be an outstanding addition to our state supreme court."[24] Liu responded to his nomination with a prepared statement: "I'm deeply honored by Governor Brown's nomination and look forward to the opportunity to serve the people of California on our state's highest court."[24]
On August 30, the state bar commission that screens all nominees gave Liu a "unanimously well qualified" rating, describing him as "brilliant, impartial, and with a work ethic second to none ... [h]e has an unwavering commitment to equal access to justice and will treat all litigants fairly, without regard to wealth or position in society."[42] He was confirmed unanimously the next day by Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, state Attorney General Kamala Harris, and Presiding Justice Joan Dempsey-Klein, the senior-most presiding justice serving on the California Court of Appeal. Ten witnesses testified in favor of his nomination and none testified against.[43]
Liu was sworn in on September 1, 2011, and took the bench on September 6, sitting on a procedural issue regarding the controversial Perry v. Schwarzenegger case.[44]
While the other justices employ five permanent staff as law clerks, Justice Liu has returned to the traditional use of recent law school graduates as one-year clerks.[45]
As of November 11, 2022[update], following the 2022 election, he was retained by California voters to continue to serve as an associate justice with 69.2% of an affirmative vote.[46]
Opinions
In his first year on the bench, Liu authored six decisions, all of them unanimous.
National Paint & Coatings Assn., Inc. v. South Coast Air Quality Management Dist.
Parks v. MBNA American Bank
He also authored the majority opinion in Apple v. Superior Court, where he ruled that online retailers can continue asking for credit card holder's information, such as telephone numbers and home addresses, when completing a transaction with a credit card. The complaint arose from the Song-Beverly Credit Card Act of 1971, which sought to protect consumer privacy when purchasing products in a store. Liu instead ruled for Apple, concluding that "because we cannot make a square peg fit a round hole, we must conclude that online transactions involving electronically downloadable products fall outside the coverage of the statute."[47]
In 2015, Justice Liu joined in the California Supreme Court's unauthored opinion, In re Hong Yen Chang, which posthumously admitted Chang to the State Bar. Chang was denied admission to the bar by the court in 1890, due to the federal Chinese Exclusion Act. Justice Liu and the rest of the California Supreme Court abrogated the court's previous decision and held that "the discriminatory exclusion of Chang from the State Bar of California was a grievous wrong" that "denied Chang equal protection of the laws".[48]
Positions
Liu is socially liberal.[49] He has written in favor of affirmative action, abortion rights, and same-sex marriage and has been critical of Bush-era waterboarding policy and the death penalty. In a 2008 article for the Stanford Law Review, Liu advocated a constitutional right to receive welfare.[50] His positions are predominantly left-leaning; however, Liu has supported charter schools and government-funded vouchers for private schools, particularly if used as a tool to "promote racial diversity."[51] Justice Liu has defended the California Supreme Court's practice of drafting its opinions before hearing oral arguments, as a gross mischaracterisation of its process.[45]
Gerald Uelman, a professor and former dean of the University of Santa Clara School of Law, was impressed with Liu's work, saying "He displays a very independent streak. His opinions are very well thought out and well reasoned." Bob Egelko, a legal affairs reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle, agreed, saying that "his dissents come within the ideological boundaries of [the California Supreme Court], which is an institution that in general moves incrementally."[52]
Publications
Liu's recent work includes "Keeping Faith with the Constitution" (2009) (with Pamela S. Karlan and Christopher H. Schroeder);[53] "Rethinking Constitutional Welfare Rights" in Stanford Law Review (2008);[54] "History Will Be Heard: An Appraisal of the Seattle/Louisville Decision" in Harvard Law & Policy Review (2008);[55] "Improving Title I Funding Equity Across States, Districts, and Schools," in Iowa Law Review (2008);[56] "Seattle and Louisville" in California Law Review (2007);[57] "Education, Equality, and National Citizenship" in Yale Law Journal (2006);[58] and "Interstate Inequality in Educational Opportunity" in New York University Law Review (2006).[59]
Awards and memberships
In 2007, Liu's work won the Education Law Association's Steven S. Goldberg Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Education Law.[60] In 2009, Liu won the UC Berkeley Distinguished Teaching Award.[61] In 2020 he was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[62]
Liu also solves Rubik's cubes competitively[68] and successfully solved a 3x3x3 cube blindfolded during a Nebraska competition organized by the WCA.[69]
^Stanford awarded Liu its Lloyd W. Dinkelspiel Award for Outstanding Service to Undergraduate Education, the James W. Lyons Dean's Award for Service, the Booth prize for Excellence in Writing, the Walter Vincenti prize, a David Starr Jordan Scholarship, and the university's President's Award for Academic Excellence.[17] The Dinkelspiel Award is the university’s highest award for undergraduate service.[18]