Nullification: Firearms Freedom Act Introduced in Ohio
Introduced
in the Ohio House on October 16, 2009, the Firearms Freedom
Act (HB-315)
seeks To enact section 2923.26 of the Revised Code to provide
that ammunition, firearms, and firearm accessories that are manufactured
and remain in Ohio are not subject to federal laws and regulations
derived under Congress authority to regulate interstate commerce
and to require the words Made in Ohio be stamped on
a central metallic part of any firearm manufactured and sold in
Ohio.
The bill was
authored by State Representatives Morgan and Martin, and currently
has 15 other co-sponsors (h/t BuckeyeFirearms.org
and OhioFreedom.com).
While the HB315s
title focuses on federal gun regulations, it has far more to do
with the 10th Amendments limit on the power of the federal
government. It specifically states:
The regulation
of intrastate commerce is vested in the states under the Ninth
and Tenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, particularly
if not expressly preempted by federal law. The congress of the
United States has not expressly preempted state regulation of
intrastate commerce pertaining to the manufacture on an intrastate
basis of firearms, firearm accessories, and ammunition.
Some supporters
of the legislation say that a successful application of such a state-law
would set a strong precedent and open the door for states to take
their own positions on a wide range of activities that they see
as not being authorized to the Federal Government by the Constitution.
Firearms Freedom
Acts have already passed in both Montana and Tennessee, and have
been introduced in a
number of other states around the country. Theres been
no lack of controversy surrounding them, either. The Tenth Amendment
Center recently
reported on the ATFs position that such laws dont matter:
The Federal
Government, by way of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
expressed its own view of the Tenth Amendment this week when it
issued an open letter to all Tennessee Federal Firearms
Licensees in which it denounced the opinion of Beavers and
the Tennessee legislature. ATF assistant director Carson W. Carroll
wrote that Federal law supersedes the Act, and thus
the ATF considers it meaningless.
Constitutional
historian Kevin R.C. Gutzman sees this as something far removed
from the founders vision of constitutional government:
Their
view is that the states exist for the administrative convenience
of the Federal Government, and so of course any conflict between
state and federal policy must be resolved in favor of the latter.
This
is another way of saying that the Tenth Amendment is not binding
on the Federal Government. Of course, that amounts to saying that
federal officials have decided to ignore the Constitution when
it doesnt suit them.
Read
the rest of the article
October
27, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 Tenth Amendment
Center
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