Resist DC: A Step-by-Step Plan for Freedom
by State Rep. Matthew Shea (WA-4th)
This summer,
legislators from several states met to discuss the steps needed
to restore our Constitutional Republic. The federal government has
ignored the many state sovereignty resolutions from 2009 notifying
it to cease and desist its current and continued overreach. The
group decided it was time to actively counter the tyranny emanating
from Washington D.C.
From those
discussions it became clear three things needed to happen.
- State
Legislatures need to pass 10 key pieces of legislation
“with teeth” to put the federal government back in its place.
- The
people must pass the legislation through the Initiative
process if any piece of the legislative agenda fails.
- County
Sheriffs must reaffirm and uphold their oaths to protect
and defend the Constitution of the United States.
With the advent
of the Tea Party Movement, many people have been asking how exactly
we can make the above reality. What follows is Part I
of the outline of that plan regarding state legislation, the action
steps any concerned citizen can take to see this legislation to
fruition, and the brief history and justifications behind each.
Step
1: Reclaim State Sovereignty through Key Nullification Legislation
Our Constitutional
Republic is founded on a system of checks and balances known as
the “separation of powers.” Rarely, however, are the states considered
part of this essential principle.
Enter the “doctrine
of nullification.”
Nullification
is based on the simple principle that the federal government cannot
be the final arbiter of the extent and boundaries of its own power.
This includes all branches of the federal
government. In the law this is known as a “conflict of interest.”
Additionally,
since the states created the federal government the federal government
was an agent of the states; not the other way around. Thus, Thomas
Jefferson believed that, by extension, the states had a natural
right to nullify (render as of no effect) any laws they believed
were unconstitutional.
In the Kentucky
Resolutions of 1798 he wrote,
“co-States,
recurring to their natural right…will concur in declaring these
acts void, and of no force, and will each take measures of its
own for providing that neither these acts, nor any others of the
General Government not plainly and intentionally authorized by
the Constitution, shalt be exercised within their respective territories.”
Alexander Hamilton
echoed this sentiment in Federalist
#85 “We may safely rely on the disposition of the state legislatures
to erect barriers against the encroachments of the national authority.”
It is clear
then that State Legislatures can stop the unconstitutional overreach
of the Obama administration through nullification. Here is a list
of proposed nullification legislation to introduce in all 50 States.
- Nullification
of Socialized Health Care [current
efforts] [example
legislation]
- Nullification
of National Cap and Trade [example
legislation]
- Federal
Enumerated Powers Requirement (Blanket Nullification) [details]
- Establishment
of a Federal Tax Escrow Account [example
legislation]
If imposed,
socialized health care and cap and trade will crush our economy.
These programs are both unconstitutional, creating government powers
beyond those enumerated by the Constitution. If those programs are
nullified, it will give the individual states a fighting chance
to detach from a federal budget in freefall and save the economies
of the individual states.
Next, blanket
nullification.
The Federal
Government, particularly the House of Representatives, needs to
abide by its own rules. In particular, House
Rule XIII 3(d) specifically states that:
“Each report
of a committee on a public bill or public joint resolution shall
contain the following: (1) A statement citing the specific powers
granted to Congress in the Constitution to enact the law proposed
by the bill or resolution.”
Needless to
say, this rule is generally ignored. The idea behind blanket nullification
is that if the Congress does not specify the enumerated power it
is using according to its own rules, or the power specified is not
one of the enumerated powers granted to Congress in the United States
Constitution, then the “law” is automatically null and void.
Lastly, the
federal government cannot survive without money. I know that seems
obvious but many states are missing the opportunity to use money
as an incentive for the federal government to return to its proper
role. Most visibly, states help collect the federal portion of the
gasoline tax. That money should be put into an escrow account at
the state level and held there. The Escrow Account legislation includes
a provision that all consumer, excise, and income taxes payable
to the federal government would go through this account first. This
would do two things. First, it would give states the ability to
collect interest on that money to help offset revenue shortfalls.
Second, it would allow states to hold that money as long as needed
as an incentive for the federal government to return within the
enumerated boundaries of its power.
Read
the rest of the article
December
1, 2009
Copyright
© 2009 Tenth Amendment
Center
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