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The
House of Representatives Must Be Elected!
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Statement before the US House of Representatives,
June 2, 2004
Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to H.J.Res. 83,
which amends the United States Constitution to allow appointed persons
to fill vacancies in the House of Representatives in the event of
an emergency. Since the Continuity of Government (COG) Commission
first proposed altering our system of government by allowing appointed
members to serve in this body, I, along with other members of Congress,
journalists, academics, and policy experts, have expressed concerns
that having appointed members serve in the House of Representatives
is inconsistent with the Houses historic function as the branch
of Congress most directly accountable to the people.
Even with the direct election of Senators, the fact that members
of the House of Representatives are elected every two years (while
Senators run for statewide office every six years) means that members
of the House are still more accountable to the people than members
of any other part of the federal government. Appointed members of
Congress simply cannot be truly representative. James Madison and
Alexander Hamilton eloquently made this point in Federalist 52:
As it is essential to liberty that the government in general
should have a common interest with the people, so it is particularly
essential that the branch of it under consideration should have
an immediate dependence on, and an intimate sympathy with, the people.
Frequent elections are unquestionably the only policy by which this
dependence and sympathy can be effectually secured.
Mr. Speaker, there are those who say that the power of appointment
is necessary in order to preserve checks and balances and thus prevent
an abuse of executive power. Of course, I agree that it is very
important to carefully guard our constitutional liberties in times
of crisis, and that an over-centralization of power in the executive
branch is one of the most serious dangers to that liberty. However,
Mr. Speaker, during a time of crisis it is all the more important
to have representatives accountable to the people making the laws.
Otherwise, the citizenry has no check on the inevitable tendency
of government to infringe on the peoples liberties at such
a time. I would remind my colleagues that the only reason we are
reexamining provisions of the PATRIOT Act is because of public concerns
that this Act gives up too much liberty for a phantom security.
Appointed officials would not be as responsive to public concerns.
Supporters of this plan claim that the appointment power will be
necessary in the event of an emergency, and that the appointed representatives
will only serve for a limited time. However, the laws passed by
these temporary representatives will be permanent.
Mr. Speaker, this country has faced the possibility of threats
to the continuity of this body several times throughout our history,
yet no one suggested removing the peoples right to vote for
members of the House of Representatives. For example, when the British
attacked the city of Washington in the War of 1812, nobody suggested
the states could not address the lack of a quorum in the House of
Representatives though elections. During the Civil War, DC neighbor
Virginia was actively involved in hostilities against the United
States government yet President Abraham Lincoln never suggested
that non-elected persons serve in the House.
Adopting any of the proposals to deny the people the ability to
choose their own representatives would let the terrorists know that
they can succeed in altering our republican institutions. I hope
all my colleagues who are considering supporting H.J.Res. 83 will
question the wisdom of handing terrorists a victory over republican
government.
The Constitution already provides the framework for Congress to
function after a catastrophic event. Article I Section 2 grants
the governors of the various states authority to hold special elections
to fill vacancies in the House of Representatives. Article I Section
4 gives Congress the authority to designate the time, manner, and
place of such special elections if states should fail to act expeditiously
following a national emergency. As Hamilton explains in Federalist
59, the time, place, and manner clause was specifically
designed to address the kind of extraordinary circumstances imagined
by the supporters of H.J.Res. 83. Hamilton characterized authority
over federal elections as shared between the states and Congress,
with neither being able to control the process entirely.
Last
month, this body fulfilled its constitutional duty by passing HR
2844, the Continuity of Representation Act. HR 2844 exercises Congresss
power to regulate the time, place, and manner of elections by requiring
the holding of special elections within 45 days after the Speaker
or acting Speaker declares 100 or more members of the House have
been killed. This proposal protects the people's right to choose
their representatives at the time when such a right may be most
important, while ensuring continuity of the legislative branch.
In conclusion, I call upon my colleagues to reject H.J.Res. 83,
since it alters the Constitution to deny the people their right
to elect their representatives at a time when having elected representation
may be most crucial.
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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Paul Archives
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