Conservatives Welcome, Liberals Not

Kenneth Starr, of Clinton impeachment fame, is welcome to be dean at California's Pepperdine Law School.  John Eastman, Republican nominee to the House and member of the Reagan administration, is welcome to be dean at California's Chapman Law School.  Erwin Chemerinsky, an imminent constitutional law scholar from Duke named "one of the top 20 legal thinkers in America," had accepted the deanship of the soon-to-be-opened University of California at Irvine Law School but has been fired before he can start.  His problem?  Too liberal.  It seems that he wrote an op-ed criticizing Alberto Gonzales, and suddenly  Chemerinsky was too "controversial" in the words of the UC Chancellor who fired him shortly after the op-ed appeared. 

Chemerinsky recognized that a dean must be dean of all the people, liberal and conservative alike.  He had already moved to form a law school Board of Advisers with prominent conservatives.  But that wasn't good enough.   The law school blogs are lighting up over this.  Nothing is jucier than academic politics.  But this is about real politics--conservatives targeting a well-known scholar because they don't like his liberal views. Recent events show how easy it is to politicize the Department of Justice.  Are American law schools next? 

Warren Reports sticks to middle class issues, but Erwin has been a long-time friend to those who care about access to bankruptcy.  He has often pitched in when Constitutional issues have arisen, volunteering his time and talents to help people work through the issues or to talk with critical policymakers.  He deserves better than this.


Comments (3)

avatar

Chemerinsky is out, but John Yoo is just alright.

Another reason to stiff my alma mater whenever I get their importunities for cash.

I have taken to returning Boalt's postage paid envelopes inscribed:

Fu*k Yoo

I presume they get the message.

Pepperdine and Chapman are Churches of Christ and Disciples of Christ affiliated/connected schools, respectively -- and private institutions.

How would either not be expected to favor the appointment  of conservatives to leadership positions?

What's your point? 

 

avatar

without presuming to speak for Prof. Warren, perhaps she expected a less parochial approach from the chancellor of a (once great) public university.

One might concede that the two clownish institutions she cited could properly be expected to choose Bozo and Crusty, respectively, as deans; such concession to the prerogatives of ownership inhering to the donors of strictly private schools may usefully be contrasted with expectations of a greater concern for scholarship than partisanship from the chancellor of UC.

Alas, having seen the University of California up close, I perhaps expect less of the Regents and Chancellor than does Prof. Warren, and am thus less surprised.

The Chancellor is the creature of the Regents, and the Regents are the creatures of the Governor.

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