Convention of States confirmed that the Georgia
legislature on Thursday passed the organization’s application “to limit the
power and jurisdiction of the federal government.”
State
Sen. Cecil Staton, R-Macon, told the organization he is “pleased that the
Georgia legislature has given voice to the frustrations of millions of
Georgians.”
“Enough
is enough. It is time to impose fiscal and other restraints on our runaway
federal government. We urge other states to join us,” said Macon, the primary
sponsor of the resolution.
“We Georgians
have become the hope of the nation today,” said Jacqueline Peterson, the
Georgia state director for the Convention of States Project. “Many thanks to
our state legislators for standing for liberty. May God bless us, every single
one!”
The idea is to have an
Article V Convention of States, the one process the U.S.
Constitution gives to citizens to bypass the White House, Congress and even
their own governors to establish a new path for the nation.
The new
president in 2017 would face new limits on executive orders, Commerce Clause
actions, a balanced federal budget and a ban on using international treaties to
govern inside the U.S. if the state-based movement is successful.
There could even be term limits for Supreme
Court justices and Congress, and a mandatory sunset of all existing federal
taxes.
The ideas
are being discussed in legislatures where a Convention of the States has been
proposed.
The
Convention of States Project, launched by Citizens for Self Governance, is
working to have state lawmakers call such a convention through the Constitution’s
Article V.
Thousands
of Americans already have signed on in support of the idea that Americans,
themselves, need to address Washington’s massive spending, over-regulation and
takeover of authority from states.
State
lawmakers in Alaska, Alabama, Florida and elsewhere also are now looking at
plans that if approved would be submitted to Congress in support of a
convention.
Michael Farris, who has been know for years as
the face of the Home
School Legal Defense Association and Patrick Henry College, now is
on the front line of seeking a convention in which state delegates would meet,
agree on a path for the country and then tell Congress what will happen.
Tell
Congress?
Exactly
that, if the amendments are proposed at the convention and ratified by the
states.
The
organization proposes a convention for “the purpose of limiting the power and
jurisdiction of the federal government.”
“We
believe the grassroots is the key to calling a successful convention,” the
promoters say. “The goal is to build a political operation in a minimum of 40
states, getting 100 people to volunteer in at least 75 percent of the state’s
legislative districts. We believe this is very doable. Only through the support
of the American people will this project have a chance to succeed.”
Among the
issues that could fall under the single subject would be a balanced budget
amendment, a new definition of the General Welfare Clause, a redefinition of
the Commerce Clause, a ban on the use of treaty provisions inside the U.S.,
limits on executive orders, term limits for Congress and the Supreme Court,
federal tax limits and a sunset of all existing federal taxes.
“Of course, these are merely examples of what
would be up for discussion,” the promoters say. “The convention of states
itself would determine which ideas deserve serious consideration, and it will
take a majority of votes from the states to formally propose any amendments.”
Farris
told WND he expects support for a convention to be gathered over a period of
two to three legislative cycles.
The
timing would align with the 2016 presidential election.
Farris
said it definitely would throw a wrench in the works.
“In my
opinion, a good wrench,” he said. “We are convinced that Washington, D.C., is
broken and that it will never, ever fix itself.”
He said
all three branches need fixing.
“The
judiciary legislates, the legislative branch, the Congress uses power it never was
intended to have, and the president misuses power worse that George III ever
thought of,” he said.
He earlier told WND
that Washington, D.C., “will never voluntarily relinquish power.”
“If we
allow Washington, D.C., to continue on its current course of big government, it
will utterly destroy American liberty. Debt is the most tangible method of
destruction. But big government complete with spying on the American public,
the improper use of executive orders, over-regulation, etc., etc., will most
certainly destroy American liberty relatively soon.”
See the case for a Convention of the States:
Farris
said trying to elect more conservatives hasn’t worked, and there really
shouldn’t be a fear that the Constitution would be opened up to destruction.
After all, any change would have to be approved by voters in 38 states.
“The
Founders gave us Article V for the very purpose of creating structural change
when the federal government abuses its power,” Farris said. “State legislatures
control this process from beginning to end. Governors are irrelevant. Congress
can only name the time and place. State legislature name the delegates and give
them their instructions.
“We will
either get good amendments or we will get nothing,” he continued. “The people
who must approve the work product – state legislatures – are the ones who name
the delegates. They are also the ones who give the convention its subject
matter.”
Would
anyone be interested in the idea of removing federal officials?
“State
legislatures currently have no power to impeach federal officials from their
states. This is not a viable option. This would, however, be a proper amendment
to suggest at the Convention of States we are proposing. I like the idea of
giving the state governments the power to impeach congressman and senators from
their states,” Farris said
Another possibility?
“The
federal courts regularly refuse to rule on constitutional issues they want to
avoid by calling them ‘political questions’ or by claiming that no one has
standing to sue … One of my ideas for an amendment would be to automatically
grant state legislatures standing to challenge any action of the federal
government as violating its constitutional limitations,” he said.
There
also could be a fix to the problem of an entrenched Supreme Court.
“I
[would] propose reconfiguring the Supreme Court after the model of the European
Court of Human Rights. There are 46 nations in that court’s jurisdiction, and
every nation appoints one judge. We should expand the Supreme Court to 50
justices and have the states appoint the justices for a specific term (six or
eight years) with no right of reappointment. That one change would do more to
ensure a constitutional government than anything I know,” Farris said.
The
Convention of States Project contends that “who decides what the law shall be
is even more important than what is decided.”
“The
protection of liberty requires a strict adherence to the principle that power
is limited and delegated,” the organization explained.
Even the
Supreme Court has acknowledged the federal government has overreached, stating
in a 1992 case: “The federal government undertakes activities today that would
have been unimaginable to the Framers in two senses; first, because the Framers
would not have conceived that any government would conduct such activities; and
second, because the Framers would not have believed that the federal
government, rather than the states, would assume such responsibilities.”
The
organization has posted online details of how state legislatures can advance
the projec
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