Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Constitutional Amendment Could Neutralize State Rights

That's right. Another constitutional amendment “solution” is being proposed to “empower states.” It would only take TWO THIRDS of the states to repeal federal laws. The whole discussion implies that states don't already have the ability to repeal federal laws through simple nullification without having to seek the consent of 33 other states! And of course it's being sold as the "Tea Party" thing to do. Read more: http://thenewamerican.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5585:lawmakers-consider-qrepeal-amendmentq&catid=42:constitution&Itemid=111

This new article, "States Should Enforce, Not Revise, the Constitution!" by Larry Greenley, is useful for educating state legislators and other citizens about the need for nullifying unconstitutional federal laws and for stopping states from issuing new calls for a constitutional convention.

The thesis of this article: "The states should rein in our out-of-control federal government by enforcing the Constitution through nullification of unconstitutional federal laws, rather than by revising the Constitution through an inherently risky constitutional convention process."

This article is now available as a free article to read online and as a free PDF (just as it appeared in the December 6, 2010 issue of The New American).

Further information about action projects to stop ObamaCare and to stop any new calls for a constitutional convention is available at:

Monday, November 1, 2010

Idahoans for Liberty releases Phil Hart YouTube Video

The activist group, which is located in in Southwest Idaho, has been strongly supporting the embattled North Idaho lawmaker both before and after his troubles became front-page news.

The link to the video is here: http://www.youtube.com/user/Idahoans4Liberty



The group has released a YouTube video entitled: "ADA COUNTY REPUBLICANS SUPPORT PHIL HART -- A message to voters in District 3." The video features both prominent and grassroots Republicans in Ada County who support Phil Hart's re-election and battles with the IRS. Among those appearing are Rod Beck, former Senate Majority Leader and current Region 4 Chair of the State Republican Party, Dennis Mansfield, longtime Christian Conservative activist, Redgie Bigham, President of the Treasure Valley Pachyderms, Jim Thomas, 2nd Vice Chair of the Ada County Republican Party, and Ryan Davidson, 3rd Vice Chair of the Ada County Republican Party.

"The goal of the video is to show voters in North Idaho that Rep. Hart is loved and supported throughout the state," said Ryan Davidson, spokesman for ID4L. "He fought and continues to fight a principled battle against the IRS and the State Tax Commission. His study of the law and the history of the 16th Amendment is nothing short of remarkable. Had the US Supreme Court chose to hear Rep. Hart's case, they very well could have determined that the original intent of the 16th Amendment was something very different than what is thought today. The Supreme Court recently determined in the famous Heller case that the original intent of the 2nd Amendment was something quite different than what legal scholars and federal court judges had been preaching. The Hellar case has led to the repeal of various gun laws. Rep. Hart's case could have led to the repeal of the income tax, had the Supreme Court summoned the courage to tackle the issue."

Rep. Hart's supporters in Ada County also take serious issue with the news stories referring to him as a "timber thief." Rep. Hart studied both state and federal forest law, and spoke with loggers (who he received affidavits from) before concluding that the law on the books at the time (confusing as it was) allowed a private citizen to harvest trees for their personal, non-commercial use. The Sheriff at the time agreed with Phil's reading of the law, but the Attorney General's office did not. A difference of opinion on a poorly written law (which was changed after Rep. Hart's case) does not make one a "timber thief" by any stretch of the imagination.

"We hope that voters in North Idaho, whose opinion of Rep. Hart may have been shaped by negative news coverage, take a second look," said Davidson. "Underneath the terrible headlines they may find a true statesman. It's what we've found."

http://www.youtube.com/user/Idahoans4Liberty

Monday, September 20, 2010

Term Limits Temptation: Creating the Pretext for a Con-Con

Written by George Detweiler

Throw the bums out! The idea is appealing to Americans who see their elected officials becoming less and less in touch with conservative government. The idea is also not new. Concerning term limits, which were considered by the Founding Fathers during the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist, No. 72: "Nothing appears more plausible at first sight, nor more ill-founded upon close inspection."

The quick-fix nature of term limitation is superficially appealing not only because of the perceived speed with which it appears to remove an offending official, but also because it does not require much thought, research, or analysis on the part of the voters. By throwing everyone out of office after a fixed number of terms, we rid ourselves of the task of deciding who is doing a good job and who is not. The finest and the worst are discarded by the calendar.

What those who are attracted by the concept of term limits generally fail to understand is that the promoters seek, not specific term limits, but general term limits, which would restrict the voter franchise and emasculate the power of the ballot. The goal -- ridding our government of the bad while keeping the top performers -- would be sacrificed on the altar of expediency.

First Proposal
While the term limits concept was considered during the Constitutional Convention of 1787, it was rejected by the delegates, who instead provided for short terms of office -- two years for the House of Representatives, four years for the Presidency, and six years for the Senate. James Madison, who opposed term limits at the Constitutional Convention, recorded in his notes the words of a fellow delegate, Roger Sherman: "Frequent elections are necessary to preserve the good behavior of rulers. They also tend to give permanency to the Government, by preserving that good behavior, because it ensures their re-election." It is difficult to challenge Sherman’s logic: If a politician were not eligible to run for re-election because of term limits, what incentive would he have to please the voters? The answer, of course, is that he would have little such incentive, and he would be even more prone than before to fall prey to the special interests in Washington.

For proof of this one need look no further than the special lame-duck session of Congress that was held after the November 1994 elections for the explicit purpose of passing the unpopular General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) treaty. It mattered little that most Americans were strongly opposed to this treaty; the elections had already been held and the congressmen who were rejected by the voters did not have to worry about facing another re-election anyway. What did matter was the intensity of the GATT lobbying effort. Is it any wonder that the position of the new world order architects triumphed over that of grassroots Americans?

Fortunately, the Founding Fathers recognized that frequent elections are the best way to keep politicians responsive, and they made the elections most frequent for that part of the federal government which is closest to the people -- the House of Representatives. They fully understood that the greatest restraint on any public official is the realization that he must face the voters for re-election, and be judged on his performance in office.

Because of the wisdom of the Founders, America has benefited from the services of many great lawmakers whose long and fruitful careers would have been cut short had term limits been in effect. Those lawmakers include John Quincy Adams, John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, Sam Houston, James Madison, and Daniel Webster.

Few lawmakers have as much political clout as the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, yet Speaker Tom Foley (D-WA) was defeated in 1994 by a political novice. Similarly, great power rests with the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, yet Chairman Dan Rostenkowski (D-IL) was defeated in 1994 by a political novice. No term limits law was necessary in these cases. Foley’s and Rostenkowski’s constituents limited their terms by way of the ballot box.

A changing of the guard began with the election of 124 freshmen members of Congress in 1992 -- without mandated term limits. It continued in 1994 with a great power shift in Congress and statehouses throughout the land -- without mandated term limits. In January 1995, 87 freshmen representatives and 11 freshmen senators took their oaths of office, demonstrating the constitutional authority of voters to limit the terms of their specific congressmen. At this writing 47 incumbent representatives and 14 incumbent senators have already announced that they will retire rather than seek election in November -- all changes wrought without mandated term limits.

The flaw of mandated term limits is demonstrated by comparing the Congresses elected in these two years. The turnover in 1992 took place simultaneously with the election of a new President. That new Congress turned out to continue business as usual in spending, social programs, and concentration of power at the federal level. The subsequent voter response in 1994 was a public reaction to that continuation of the same old game. Term limits, whether specific and voter imposed or general and imposed by law, never guarantee an improvement in government service. Only a well-informed and thoughtful electorate can do that.

Education Is the Key
For this reason, Americans sincerely concerned about poor representation in Washington should work to increase public understanding, not to limit the voter franchise. Until the understanding is created, the new faces will not provide any better representation than the old ones.

But the ability to create understanding is limited when voting records no longer matter. If an incumbent with a record of performance were denied the option of running for reelection, voters would be forced to choose a candidate without a congressional voting record. The entire success of a voter-education program such as Tax Reform IMmediately (TRIM) depends upon a congressman’s ability to seek re-election. By making a congressman’s voting record widely available through the mass circulation of its voter-education bulletins, TRIM helps voters know who the big spenders are. More than a few congressmen have become more fiscally conservative as a result of TRIM exposure of their big- spending voting records. But these congressmen would have had little incentive to change had they known that they would not be facing the voters in a reelection bid.

Another result of mandated term limits would be increased dependence by congressmen on unelected staffers and the entrenched beltway bureaucracy. Were experienced elected officials tossed out by term limits, their inexperienced replacements would have to spend time learning the ropes. Until the newcomers were up to speed in job performance, the career civil servants, who never have to face the voters, would take up the slack and exercise greater control. By the time the novices gained sufficient experience, they would be out of office because of the term limits law.

Power and Money
Government paychecks and power are terribly addictive. Term limits would create a pool of ex-congressmen and ex-senators desperate to stay on the federal payroll rather than find a real job in the private sector. The executive branch -- that vast network of departments, bureaus, agencies, advisers, and regulatory commissions -- would become the employer of choice for those exiting Congress.

The President, fully realizing the attraction Administration jobs would offer to congressmen forced to retire due to term limits, would undoubtedly use this as leverage to convince these congressmen to vote for Administration policies. And why wouldn’t many of these congressmen accept the bait, when the wishes of their constituents no longer mattered? Consequently, term limits would increase the influence of the executive branch at the expense of the legislative branch, further disrupting the delicate system of checks and balances that the Founding Fathers so carefully crafted into the Constitution.

As for the "career politicians" whom term limits would supposedly eject from the ranks of government, many of them would remain in Washington, only now they would be in the executive branch, where they would be safely insulated from the direct wrath of the voters.

Meanwhile, term limits on the state and local levels would also create a pool of out-of work office holders casting lustful eyes at a new job in Congress. Rather than rid the nation of "career politicians," mandated term limits would merely create circulating pools of public employees making the rounds from the statehouses, to Congress, to the executive branch in search of higher paychecks and greater power.

Slumbering Citizens
The mere passage of a term limits law would have a soporific effect on the public. Content in the misconception that once limits are imposed only competent, honorable people could hold office, the American citizenry would assume that their vigilance is no longer needed; they would thus be prone to ignore the actions of their elected officials and go into a deep slumber. Voters would elect a string of mandated short termers who would go about their business largely unwatched.

After the unprecedented three-term Franklin Roosevelt Administration, Congress proposed the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution, limiting a President to two full terms. The Amendment was ratified by the states and became a part of the Constitution on February 27, 1951. Evaluation of the Presidents who have followed ratification of that amendment reveals that they have been no more competent, no more honorable, and -- most important -- no more faithful to the Constitution than Presidents who preceded the 22nd Amendment. Mandated term limits have been a resounding failure at the presidential level, and there is no reason to expect greater success at the congressional level. There is simply no substitute for well-informed voters who see through hollow promises and who demand that elected representatives adhere strictly to the Constitution.

Are the leading promoters of term limits sincerely seeking better government, or do they have another agenda? A complete answer to this question requires a brief detour. Article V of the U.S. Constitution establishes two distinct methods of amending that venerable document. By one method, Congress proposes amendments and sends them to the states to be ratified, either by the legislatures of each state or by a special convention called in each state to consider the amendment. Every existing amendment to the Constitution has been made using this method.

By the other method, the legislatures of two-thirds of the states (34) must apply to Congress to call a convention of delegates to propose amendments, after which Congress is required to call a convention. This method of amendment has never been used and how it would work in practice remains a mystery.

First Attempt
In 1975 the North Dakota legislature became the first state to apply to Congress for a constitutional convention (con-con) under Article V for the expressed and limited purpose of proposing a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced federal budget. Other states followed North Dakota’s lead, not knowing that a state which applies for a con- con has no authority to limit the convention.

Leading the charge for a balanced budget convention was James Dale Davidson of the National Taxpayers Union. His fund-raising appeals pleaded for money to support his movement for a con-con for the limited purpose of proposing a balanced budget amendment. At one point 32 of the necessary 34 states had applied for a balanced budget convention. Alerted to the danger, the John Birch Society, Eagle Forum, and other patriotic organizations and individuals began to testify against the con-con calls at legislative hearings, proclaiming the view of the vast majority of the American public, liberal or conservative: "Hands off the Constitution!" Regardless of the politics of the citizenry, good Americans don’t want anyone tampering with that document.

In 1983 Missouri became the last state to apply for a balanced budget con-con; the effort had lost its momentum and was dead in the water, despite later periodic efforts by backers to get other state legislatures to apply for a balanced budget convention. Armed with the fact that a con-con cannot be limited to one subject, three states which had initially applied for a convention withdrew their applications. The balanced budget con-con advocates refused to recognize the withdrawals, continuing steadfastly to maintain that a convention could be limited to considering amendments on one subject. Judges, including former Chief Justice Warren Burger, and many legal scholars disagreed.

Now enters the term limits movement. Like the pony express rider who leaves the tired mount behind for a fresh one, the con-con advocates have changed from championing a balanced federal budget to championing congressional term limits. Nonetheless, their ultimate goal remains the same: a constitutional convention that will execute major changes in the structure of the federal government and, perhaps, in the structure of the state governments. In the middle of this latest effort has been the U.S. Term Limits Foundation.

Careful ground work has been done to mold and manipulate public opinion into the belief that the only way to dislodge entrenched politicians is with mandated term limits. U.S. Term Limits distributes a slick video replete with examples of high congressional salaries, retirement benefits, and perquisites as reasons to hold a term limits con-con.

The target of the video is the under-informed citizen who is concerned about government waste, corruption, and special interests. The video proclaims that a strong majority of the American people wants term limits, but it is careful to avoid specifying the kinds of alterations to the Constitution which a con-con could produce.

Aggressive Effort
Initiative petition drives conducted from 1990-94 put term limits measures on the ballots in 23 states. Candidates for office were publicly asked for their positions on term limits, making it a campaign issue in several elections. The ballot measures were written so as to include state, local, and -- in some states -- congressional offices, in direct conflict with Article I, Sections 2 and 3 of the U.S. Constitution. Those sections provide an exclusive list of qualifications for office in the House and Senate.

An uninformed public bought the term limits line; the measures passed in each state amid a general public inclination for cleaning house. Term limits thereby became law in each of these states. The next step was a court challenge to the new state laws. It came in Arkansas, which had amended its constitution to impose term limits on the senators and representatives the state sends to Washington. A class-action suit was filed on behalf of the Arkansas League of Women Voters and others contending that state-imposed term limits violate the Constitution. In U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton (1995), the Supreme Court agreed, holding that states have no power to change or add to the qualifications for office set forth in the Constitution.

Term limits advocates claimed that the courts had struck down the will of the people by blocking the implementation of state laws imposing congressional term limits. In berating the Supreme Court for its decision, U.S. Term Limits Executive Director Paul Jacob complained: "It’s not fair that the country’s most powerful judges (congressionally approved for life) are paying back their friends in Congress for giving them the only job that offers lifelong job security!" In point of fact, the Supreme Court simply applied the language of the Constitution and found state-imposed congressional term limits to be unconstitutional.

The stage was thus set for the campaign for a constitutional convention. Since Congress would never propose an amendment to the Constitution to limit itself out of office, a concon was the only way to get such an amendment.

Doubts about the goals of the term limits movers and shakers are erased when one examines the language which appears in a new set of initiative measures which U.S. Term Limits hopes to see passed this November in 17 of the 23 states that had adopted term limit measures by 1994. Unlike the balanced budget con-con applications, the new term limits measures are not restricted to a single subject. Instead, they seek to require the state legislatures to apply to Congress for a convention to propose amendments (plural) to the Constitution. In essence, the 1996 ballot measures are asking for a general convention, one authorized to propose changes in the basic fabric and framework of the entire American system of federal government.

Typical of the language in the initiative measures are sections requiring a notation on the ballot beside the names of candidates who have declined to support term limits legislation. The Idaho version reads: "Disregarded Voters’ Instruction on Term Limits." Idaho Attorney General Alan G. Lance has issued an advisory opinion that the initiative measure being prepared for circulation in that state is unconstitutional. In his opinion letter on the proposed ballot language, Lance reasoned:

[B]y placing unfavorable comments next to a candidate’s name on the ballot, the state is effectively signaling to the electorate that this candidate is unworthy of their vote in contrast to other candidates. Thus, the state is decreasing the chance that such individuals would be elected based upon their stand on a political issue and, thus, decreasing the value of the votes of his or her supporters.... Requiring the State of Idaho to print any of the above language on a ballot raises problems under several constitutional provisions, including the freedom of speech, the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. and Idaho Constitutions, and the right of suffrage provision contained in the Idaho Constitution.
Deceptive Language
In regard to how these initiatives will be presented on the ballots themselves, deception will be the rule. The Idaho version includes a short title making no mention of a constitutional convention, although a con-con is mentioned in the long title. The long title does not, however, clarify that the initiative measure seeks to have the legislature apply for a general, unlimited convention.

In the text of the initiative petition, the con-con language does not appear until the middle of a document of four legal pages in length. Thus, the bottom-line purpose of the initiative takes considerable time and reading to discover. That purpose is camouflaged by the dominance of the term limits language; the actual language seeking an unlimited con-con is minimal. Consequently, the voter who is approached in a parking lot and asked to sign the petition will have little time or opportunity to discover, and no reason to suspect, that the measure is designed to seek a general constitutional convention that could draft not only a term limits amendment, but a new constitution.

Only state legislatures can apply to Congress for a con-con. The latest initiative measures, therefore, cannot produce a con-con application. To circumvent this hurdle, the term limit promoters have placed language in their initiatives directing the legislatures to apply to Congress for a convention. Regarding this approach, the Idaho Attorney General Lance stated that "the government is speaking in support of a constitutional term limits amendment, a political issue, best left to the political campaign rhetoric between candidates and their supporters. Not only is the government speaking in support of one side of a controversial issue, it is lending its voice at the most crucial point in time in the relationship between voters and candidates." Lance opined that "while government is free to add its voice to the marketplace of ideas, it is highly doubtful the state can use its power to seek to manipulate election results by slanting what appears on the ballot. This initiative has the effect of praising one candidate and penalizing another based solely upon the political beliefs expressed by such individuals. Based upon the law cited above, such conduct on the part of the state is improper."

A pamphlet published by U.S. Term Limits assures, "A convention cannot enact anything, it can only propose an amendment or amendments. Nothing can become part of the Constitution without being ratified by both Houses of thirty-eight state legislatures."This statement is patently false. Article V of the Constitution states that proposed amendments shall become effective "when ratified by the Legislatures of three-fourths of the several States, or by Conventions in three-fourths thereof, as the one or the other Mode of Ratification may be proposed by the Congress...."

For example, the 21st Amendment repealing prohibition was, in fact, ratified by special state conventions, not by the state legislatures. Congress chose that mode of ratification because it knew that there was not sufficient support among the state legislatures to assure ratification. But Congress did not stop there. It also established guidelines for the delegate- selection process that helped ensure that mostly pro-Amendment delegates would be selected and that the 21st Amendment would become part of the Constitution. In this fashion, pro-prohibition Utah became the final state to ratify the 21st Amendment, even though the state legislature was staunchly opposed to it.

Contrary to the claim of U.S. Term Limits, once a state legislature has applied to Congress for a con-con, there is no guarantee that that legislature will ever have the opportunity to pass judgment on the product of any convention which is called.

The U.S. Term Limits video proposes that the move to seek a con-con can be used to pressure Congress to propose a term limits amendment. There is extreme danger in doing so. If the 34th state applied for a con-con, Congress would be duty bound under Article V to call one even if Congress has already proposed a term limits amendment. The danger is exacerbated by the fact that U.S. Term Limits is seeking a general convention, not one purportedly limited to proposing a term limits amendment.

The true goal is a con-con for any purpose, which instantly becomes a con-con for every purpose. Once a con-con begins, it can propose amendments upon any subject it chooses, and whatever limitations the state legislatures thought they had imposed on it may be ignored. Delegates to a convention would never face the voters to account for their actions; they would be accountable to no one. A con-con could make drastic changes in the Constitution involving radical redesign of the federal government. It could propose a truly national government with a parliament along the lines of Great Britain and European countries. It could propose whatever it likes. It could even alter the methods of ratification for the changes which it produces.

Changing the Rules
The convention which met in Philadelphia in 1787 had convened for the limited purpose of amending the Articles of Confederation, the constitution under which our nation then operated. But from the start, the delegates ignored the limitations on their authority and began to write the Constitution under which we now live. They knew that the new Constitution would not receive unanimous support from the states as required by Article XIII of the Articles of Confederation. To solve this dilemma the convention simply changed the rules, creating its own method of ratification, found in Article VII of our present-day Constitution. Article VII, which specified that the Constitution would become effective upon ratification of only nine of the 13 states, made possible the birth of the Constitution.

Since the method of ratification can be changed, what would prevent it from being eliminated? It happened once; what assurance do we have that it could not happen again? A modern-day convention could conceivably produce a new constitution that would take effect upon adjournment of the convention! Recall our earlier observation that a convention-born amendment has never been proposed and that the process is shrouded in mystery. The final outcome of a con-con and its effects on the federal system and limited federal authority cannot be predicted. What can be predicted, however, is that power seekers will always find the Constitution an obstacle to their ambitions, and will always attempt to circumvent it and -- if possible -- destroy it. In an age when relatively few Americans understand the basic principles upon which their government was founded, a modern-day con-con would provide power-seekers with an opportunity to tailor the Constitution to their own liking.

In Idaho the con-con movement which carries the term limits banner bears the name Citizens for Federal Term Limits. It is headed by Donna Weaver, who told THE NEW AMERICAN that the state organization is affiliated with U.S. Term Limits. Circulation of petitions to get the term limits initiative on the state ballot has already begun. All petition circulators will be Idaho residents and will be paid for the signatures they collect.

Weaver stated that the language of the initiative measure was drafted using text supplied by U.S. Term Limits; it is the same language used in the other states where term limits initiative petitions are being circulated. Weaver also noted that the wording with reference to a constitutional convention was lifted from Article V with no changes in order to minimize the chance for error in case the validity of the initiative is challenged, hence the application for amendments in the plural rather than a single amendment. She volunteered that a convention could propose amendments on topics other than term limits, although she regarded the Idaho application language as seeking a limited rather than a general convention.

Top-Down Agenda
We have no reason to doubt Weaver’s sincerity. Yet while Weaver cautions, "I’m not saying that I think that we ought to have a convention on this issue or any issue," the top national leadership of U.S. Terms Limits is fully aware that the real purpose of the term limits movement is a general, unlimited con-con. It is unlikely that state coordinators such as Weaver are in on the game plan.

Weaver views the term limits movement as a means by which the American people can retake control of their government. This is in sharp contrast to the reality of the control which emanates from the national organization to those in the states. Note, for instance, that the language for the state initiative measures is supplied by the national headquarters in Washington, DC. Given the distaste which the American people have for tampering with the Constitution, it is doubtful that people in middle leadership and below would support the movement if they knew the real agenda.

The top players in the term limits movement are the same people who have pressed for a balanced budget con-con. James Dale Davidson’s National Taxpayers Union has used the same propaganda to solicit funds for a term limits con-con as it used earlier to solicit funds for a balanced budget con-con. The graphics are the same. The format is the same. The wording is even the same, except that the words "term limits" have replaced the words "balanced budget." Former Pennsylvania Governor Richard Thornburgh and former Colorado Governor Richard Lamm have not only formed Citizens for a Balanced Budget Amendment, but have joined with the National Taxpayers Union, thus aligning themselves with the term limits camp.

Interestingly, Thornburgh is also a member of the Committee on the Constitutional System (CCS). Other CCS members include Lloyd Cutler, chairman and former legal counsel to Jimmy Carter; former Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dillon; former Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara; and Senator Nancy Kassebaum (R-KS). Thornburgh’s alliance with the CCS and his involvement with both the balanced budget and term limits con-con movements establish an important link between the radical changes to the Constitution sought by the CCS and both con-con efforts. Funding for the CCS comes from the Dillon Fund, American Express, and the Ford, Hewlett, and Rockefeller Foundations.

Proposed "Reforms"
The announced purpose of the CCS is to consider constitutional changes such as:

Requiring voters to vote for President, Vice President, senators, and congressmen as a unit, under the banner of one or the other political party, thereby eliminating splitting the ballot and choosing people for these offices from different parties.
  • Permitting the President to dissolve Congress and call for new elections.
  • Permitting Congress to vote "no confidence" in the President and force new elections.
  • Allowing the President to propose certain types of legislation that could be adopted by popular referendum instead of by Congress.
  • Allowing the Senate to ratify treaties by a smaller majority vote instead of the twothirds majority vote that is now required.
  • Placing congressional leaders in the President’s cabinet, thereby further eroding the separation of powers between the legislative and the executive branches.
Taken as a whole, the CCS "reforms" would have the result of gutting the Constitution. They would destroy the separation of powers built into our system, give the political party in power control over both the executive and legislative branches, and, in general, allow more power to be transferred to the Washington leviathan.

Don’t be surprised if the CCS and other would-be Constitution "reformers" attempt to use a modern-day con-con to implement their radical agenda. Back in 1985, CCS co-chair Lloyd Cutler wrote that "if the pending call for a constitutional convention to propose a ’balance the budget’ amendment is joined by the two additional states needed to provide the triggering two-thirds ... our committee may be ready with some better ideas." The more recent call for a con-con to limit congressional terms could be used just as easily.

The safest way to preserve the integrity of the Constitution is to defeat all efforts to have state legislatures apply for any convention, regardless of how appealing the sales pitch or the expressed "purpose" may appear. This would be true even if the pretext for a con-con were a worthwhile proposal. As we have seen, limiting congressional terms by making incumbents ineligible to run for re-election would not result in better government, and would in fact open the door to great harm to our Republic.


Mr. Detweiler, a former Assistant Attorney General for the state of Idaho, is a practicing attorney in Twin Falls, Idaho.

[Click here to send an email to your state legislators in opposition to a constitutional convention. Today in 2010 many newly-awakened activists are calling for term limits and a constitutional convention (often referred to as a con-con). The John Birch Society has been leading the fight against these tempting "cure-alls" for several decades now. This article, "Term Limits Temptation: Creating the Pretext for a Con-Con" by George Detweiler is a valuable summary of the arguments against term limits and a constitutional convention, and will be useful for constitutionalists as they fend off this new round of enthusiasm for term limits and a con-con. It was originally published in the June 10, 1996 issue of The New American magazine.]


James Madison: No Term Limits Champion

The record of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 clearly shows that James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur Morris, Roger Sherman, and most all of the Founders were firmly opposed to terms limitation, or what they called "ineligibility for reappointment." There can be no question about the correctness of the Convention record concerning Madison’s view because Madison himself, under the direction of Convention chair George Washington, kept the record.

But the present promoters of term limits have not paid much attention to Madison’s notes on the Convention. Neither have they searched The Federalist Papers to learn the intent of the framers on the subject of term limits. In a vain effort to co-opt Madison, term limit advocates have resorted to a frail thread in the fabric of his pre-convention plan. As it happens, James Madison brought to the Convention of 1787 an outline for the new government known as the Virginia Plan, which left intact the custom of single one-year terms then mandated for delegates serving in Congress under the Articles of Confederation.

On this basis, a graduate student at the College of William and Mary has written an essay, published by U.S. Term Limits, under the title: James Madison: Term Limit Radical, The Father of the Constitution's Solution to Congressional Careerism. Both the title of the article and its assertions are ludicrous.

Under Madison’s Virginia Plan all members of Congress would have been elected by the state legislatures. But when the Convention moved to have members of the House elected directly by the people, Madison voted for that principle, revised his plan accordingly, and rejected term limits. He later explained in The Federalist, No. 53:

No argument can be drawn on this subject from the case of the delegates to the existing Congress. They are elected annually, it is true; but their re-election is considered by the legislative assemblies almost as a matter of course. The election of the representatives of the people would not be governed by the same principle.
Madison then cited the advantage of long-standing membership in a Congress elected directly by the people and explained the disadvantage of a great number of new members in Congress:

A few of the members, as happens in all such assemblies, will possess superior talents; will, by frequent re-elections, become members of long standing; will be thoroughly masters of the public business, and perhaps not unwilling to avail themselves of those advantages. The greater the proportion of new members and the less the information of the bulk of the members, the more apt they will be to fall into the snares that may be laid for them.
Contrary to U.S. Term Limits, Madison and most of the delegates to the Convention wanted good men frequently re-elected to preserve the permanency of government and to retain the advantage of their years of experience. At no time did Madison argue for term limits or vote in favor of ineligibility due to tenure. Madison, Hamilton, and Washington were in fact prime examples of "careerism," having served a combined total of 88 years in public service.

The ideas promulgated by U.S. Term Limits are a direct reversal of the facts of recorded history and are deeply offensive to the intelligence of all who understand the wisdom and exceptional character of our nation’s founders.

The Founding Fathers on Term Limits

Alexander Hamilton: "Nothing appears more plausible at first sight, nor more illfounded upon close inspection [than term limits].... One ill effect of the exclusion would be a diminution of the inducements to good behavior. There are few men who would not feel much less zeal in the discharge of a duty when they were conscious that the advantage of the station with which it was connected must be relinquished at a determinate period, than when they were permitted to entertain a hope of obtaining, by meriting, a continuance of them." (The Federalist, #72)

John Adams: "There is no right clearer, and few of more importance, than that the people should be at liberty to choose the ablest and best men, and that men of the greatest merit should exercise the most important employments; yet, upon the present [term limits] supposition, the people voluntarily resign this right, and shackle their own choice.... [T]hey must all return to private life, and be succeeded by another set, who have less wisdom, wealth, virtue, and less of the confidence and affection of the people." (A Defence of the Constitutions of the United States of America)

James Madison: "No man can be a competent legislator who does not add to an upright intention and a sound judgement a certain degree of knowledge of the subjects on which he is to legislate. A part of this knowledge may be acquired by means of information which lie within the compass of men in private as well as public stations. Another part can only be attained, or at least thoroughly attained, by actual experience in the station which requires the use of it.... A few of the members [of Congress], as happens in all such assemblies, will possess superior talents; will, by frequent re-elections, become members of long standing; will be thoroughly masters of the public business, and perhaps not unwilling to avail themselves of those advantages. The greater the proportion of new members and the less the information of the bulk of the members, the more apt will they be to fall into the snares that may be laid for them." (The Federalist, #53)

Samuel Adams: "If ever time should come, when vain and aspiring men shall possess the highest seats in Government, our country will stand in need of its experienced patriots to prevent its ruin." (1780)

Roger Sherman: "Frequent elections are necessary to preserve the good behavior of rulers. They also tend to give permanency to the Government, by preserving that good behavior, because it ensures their re-election.... In Connecticut we have existed 132 years under an annual government; and as long as a man behaves himself well, he is never turned out of office." (From Madison’s notes at the Constitutional Convention, 1787)

Gouverneur Morris: "The ineligibility proposed by the [terms limitation] clause as it stood tended to destroy the great motive to good behavior, the hope of being rewarded by a re-appointment. It was saying to him, ’make hay while the sun shines.’" (From Madison’s notes at the Constitutional Convention, 1787)

Samuel Adams: "Much safer is it, and much more does it tend to promote the welfare and happiness of society to fill up the offices of Government after the mode prescribed in the American Constitution, by frequent elections of the people. They may indeed be deceived in their choice; they sometimes are; but the evil is not incurable; the remedy is always near; they will feel their mistakes, and correct them." (1790)

Monday, August 2, 2010

Congressman: "The Federal Government can do most anything in this country."

August recess... town hall meeting... Pete Stark's latest controversial statement about the Federal Government having very few Constitutional limits: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1-eBz8hyoE

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century

Nullification is an indispensable book about what could become the most effective means of stopping an out-of-control federal government. Nullification is simply an act by states (and occasionally individuals) to resist unconstitutional federal laws.

Action Item:
  • Ask your local bookstore to stock Nullification and then get a copy for you and for one of your legislative candidates.
  • Get some liberty-loving friends to do the same thing so bookstores display it and all of your legislative candidates get a copy.
Citizens across the country are fed up with the politicians in Washington telling us how to live our lives—and then sticking us with the bill. But what can we do? Actually, we can just say “no.” As New York Times bestselling author Thomas E. Woods, Jr., explains, nullification allows states to reject unconstitutional federal laws. For many tea partiers nationwide, nullification is rapidly becoming the only way to stop an over-reaching government drunk on power. From privacy to national healthcare, Woods shows how this growing and popular movement is sweeping across America and empowering states to take action against Obama’s socialist policies and big-government agenda.

Unconstitutional laws are pouring out of Washington...
...but we can stop them.

Just ask Thomas Jefferson. There is a “rightful remedy” to federal power grabs—it’s called Nullification.

In Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century, historian and New York Times bestselling author Thomas E. Woods, Jr. explains not only why nullification is the constitutional tool the Founders envisioned, but how it works—and has already been employed in cases ranging from upholding the First Amendment to knocking down slave laws before the Civil War. In Nullification, Woods shows:
  • How the states were meant to be checks against federal tyranny—and how a growing roster of governors and state attorneys general are recognizing they need to become that again
  • Why the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution reinforces the rights of states to nullify unconstitutional laws
  • Why it was left to the states to uphold the simple principle that an unconstitutional law is no law at all
  • Why, without nullification, ordinary Americans will continue to suffer the oppression of unjust, unconstitutional laws
  • PLUS thorough documentation of how the Founding Fathers believed nullification could be applied
Nullification is not just a book—it could become a movement to restore the proper constitutional limits of the federal government. Powerful, provocative, and timely, Nullification is sure to stir debate and become a constitutional handbook for all liberty-loving Americans.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Stewards of our State

Idaho State Representative Dennis Lake, chairman of the House Revenue and Taxation Committee, says, “2011 is all about revenue enhancement.” How do you like the new codewords for raising taxes?

The Sovereign Idaho Coalition had an extremely successful 2010 legislative session. We made state sovereignty issues the prevailing theme of the session.

2011 is not an election year. 2009 wasn't an election year either and you may remember some of the irresponsible attempts to raise taxes that year. Governor Otter says that in 2011, "The legislature is going to have an opportunity to look for additional revenues."

2011 will be a battle no matter how the November elections go. Supporters of Big Government are already planning their media talking points and marshaling their forces to reverse the responsible reductions in the size of government that were accomplished in 2010.

About this time last year we began forming our strategies that resulted in our 2010 successes. Our formula was effective - partially because we enjoyed the element of surprise - but you can be sure we will not go unchallenged in 2011.

Now is the time:
  • To build on our momentum and return government to its limited, low-cost role.
  • For our state government to protect Idahoans from federal usurpations by nullifying unconstitutional federal laws.
  • To promote free enterprise and defend sensible government cutbacks.
In 2010 we passed the Health Freedom Act, the Firearms Freedom Act, and the Public School Financial Transparency Act. Plus, we made significant progress on sound money for Idaho.

In 2011 we would like to pass a Federal Health Care Nullification Act, a Constitutional Tender Act, a Constitutional Carry Act, and a Fully Informed Jury Act. Plus, we want to equip you to influence your legislators and prevent any tax increases in Idaho.

Every political season is like a new chess game - always mix up strategies or your opponents will gain a predictable advantage.

This year, instead of Converging on the Capitol in the middle of winter to wander around trying to find our representatives and then compete against lobbyists for their ear, we're going to meet with our representatives in their home districts when and where we have a lot more influence on them.

When's the best time to have a group sit down with your legislators? They head to Boise near the beginning of January. November and December are not good months because of the holidays. The months leading up to the November 2 election are perfect (Aug, Sept, Oct). They will be looking for opportunities to meet with their constituents and we will deliver!

How about a Tea Party with your Legislators. They're not invited to give a stump speech. They're invited to listen to your concerns and be reminded that they work for the people, not for the special interests, lobbyists and bureaucrats. Set a time and place, line up speakers for the various issues, invite all the candidates and get as many patriots there as possible.

Sovereign Idaho Coalition Chairman, Pete Ketcham, is ready to fly/travel around the state and deliver presentations about nullification at your event if you'd like a lead spokesman to address the legislators. He can be contacted at 208-983-7552.

John Birch Society State Coordinator, Dale Pearce, is also available for speaking about nullification and for helping you reach out to local health care and other professionals to help stimulate their support in convincing state legislators to take nullification action in the coming legislative session. He can be contacted at 208-466-4664.

By working in concert with patriots across the state we can hold our representatives accountable to their duty. Unite with the Sovereign Idaho Coalition - Stewards of our State - and let's make Idaho the freest state in the Union.

Visit http://groups.google.com/group/sovereign-idaho-coalition to coordinate with others in your legislative district and plan a Tea Party with your Legislators.

Monday, July 19, 2010

Veto Power of the People

“All political power is inherent in the people. Government is instituted for their equal protection and benefit, and they have the right to alter, reform or abolish the same whenever they may deem it necessary.” - Constitution of the State of Idaho, Article I, Section 2
Similar wording is found in most other state constitutions, in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and in the Declaration of Independence. However, similar wording is not found in most school “social studies” textbooks.

American jurisprudence is built on the foundation of common law and natural rights which are firmly established in our founding documents. Any acts of government which defy common law and violate natural rights are null and void.

Jury nullification is one of the important legal and peaceful processes by which the people can resist and nullify unjust laws. It is a de facto and traditional power of juries, even though modern textbooks and judges rarely, if ever, inform people of the jury's nullification power.

The power of jury nullification derives from an inherent quality of common law - a general unwillingness to inquire into jurors' motivations during or after deliberations. A jury's ability to nullify the law is further protected by two other common law precedents: the prohibition on punishing jury members for their verdict and the prohibition on retrying defendants after an acquittal.

If the people have all power, and have at all times a right to alter, reform or abolish their government in such manner as they may think proper, then they certainly have the right of jury nullification, which is tantamount to altering or reforming their government when they come together on juries to decide cases.

A single nullification verdict against a particular law may or may not alter or reform the government, but thousands of such verdicts certainly do. Witness the decisive role of jury nullification in establishing freedom of speech and press in the American Colonies, defeating the Fugitive Slave Act and ending alcohol prohibition.

There is no doubt that jury nullification was one of the rights and powers that the people commonly exercised in 1791 when the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution was adopted. As legal historian Lawrence Friedman has written:
In American legal theory, jury-power was enormous, and subject to few controls. There was a maxim of law that the jury was judge both of law and of fact in criminal cases. This idea was particularly strong in the first Revolutionary generation when memories of royal justice were fresh. Jury nullification is therefore one of the “rights . . . retained by the people” in the Ninth Amendment. And it is one of the “powers . . . reserved . . . to the people” in the Tenth Amendment.
Jury nullification is decentralization of political power. It is the people’s most important veto in our constitutional system. The jury vote is the only time the people ever vote on the application of a real law in real life.

The vast majority (probably over 99%) of jurors are unaware of their lawful right and power to judge the justness of the law and disregard it if they felt enforcing that law would bring an unjust guilty verdict.

Wiley Drake, Pastor of First Southern Baptist Church in Buena Park, CA, was charged with violating city zoning laws because he had exercised his duty to house and care for the poor and the homeless on Church grounds. The trial judge had misinformed the jury that they cannot consider Pastor Drake’s motives or intent, nor could they judge the law. In short, the judge told the jurors that if they find that Pastor Drakes had violated the bad and unjust law, that they must convict Pastor Drake.

Well, the jurors followed the judge’s instructions and convicted Pastor Drake of the "crime" of housing and caring for the poor on his church grounds in "violation" of city zoning codes. A few days after the trial, these jurors found out that they had the right and power to judge this bad and unjust law and could have acquitted Pastor Drake.

These jurors came to Pastor Drake’s church and apologized to Pastor Drake for their misguided conviction of him. These jurors were mad at the judge for deliberately misleading the jurors into believing that they could not judge the law as well as the facts of the case.

But no apology could reverse the wrongful conviction of Pastor Drake. The Judge could have jailed Pastor Drake for up to 2 years!!! He didn’t do so only because of the huge publicity that Pastor Drake was getting in the press. Similarly, thousands of people are wrongfully charged and convicted every month for violating bad, unjust and unconscionable laws. Some day a bad law can be used against YOU!

So what is the solution for bringing justice back to our courts?

An Idaho Fully Informed Jury Act would require the judge in every trial to inform the jury of its inherent power to judge the law as well as the facts of the case before them so that no innocent man like Pastor Drake would be wrongfully convicted by a misinformed jury.

Judges would be required to add something like the following to their instructions to the jury:
"It is the duty of the court to advise you of the law, and it is your duty to consider the instructions of the court; if you find that the law or the application which the court instructs you upon is unjust, you may vote to acquit the defendant or find him not liable for damages."
Would you like the legislature to pass an Idaho Fully Informed Jury Act? Forward this to candidates for state legislature and ask them to sponsor it. Do you think more Americans should know about this? Forward it to your email list.

Learn more about jury nullification:

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Legislative Immunity: Who Benefits? by Rep. Matt Shea

Recently, an oft quoted myth has resurfaced that legislative immunity is a perk for State Representatives which can be invoked whenever convenient. For example, this myth is being used as the basis for accusations of impropriety being leveled against Idaho State Representative Phil Hart (3rd H.D.)

Rep. Hart has relied on a provision in the Idaho Constitution to postpone an income tax controversy he is involved in until after the conclusion of the legislative session. Both Washington and Idaho legislators are protected from “any civil process” while their legislatures are in session. As a threshold matter of state sovereignty that protection also includes civil process attempted by the federal government.

State Constitutions

Article 2, Section 16 of the Washington Constitution reads:
Members of the legislature shall be privileged from arrest in all cases except treason, felony and breach of the peace; they shall not be subject to any civil process during the session of the legislature, nor for fifteen days next before the commencement of each session.
Similarly Article III, Section 7 of Idaho’s Constitution reads:
Senators and representatives in all cases...shall not be liable to any civil process during the session of the legislature, nor during the ten days next before the commencement thereof…
There are eleven states that have similar language in their respective constitutions which use the phrase “any civil process.” An I.R.S. decision on what Rep. Hart’s allowable business deductions are is administrative in nature and clearly a civil matter because it involves an attempt to take property. It is therefore, “any civil process.”

The History of and Reasons for Legislative Immunity

Our Founding Fathers just freed from English tyranny wanted to ensure that elected Representatives would not face arbitrary arrest for the sake of political retribution.

As stated by the United States Supreme Court:
The privilege of legislators to be free from arrest or civil process for what they do or say in legislative proceedings has taproots in the Parliamentary struggles of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. As Parliament achieved increasing independence from the Crown, its statement of the privilege grew stronger. In 1689, the Bill of Rights declared in unequivocal language: "That the Freedom of Speech, and Debates or Proceedings in Parliament, ought not to be impeached or questioned in any Court or Place out of Parliament." 1 Wm. & Mary, Sess. 2, c. II. See Stockdale v. Hansard, 9 Ad. & El. 1, 113-114 (1839)... Freedom of speech and action in the legislature was taken as a matter of course by those who severed the Colonies from the Crown and founded our Nation. It was deemed so essential for representatives of the people that it was written into the Articles of Confederation and later into the Constitution. Tenney v. Brandhove, 341 U.S. 367, 372 (1951).
The Founding Fathers also wanted to ensure that the people’s voice was protected and uninhibited:
The reason for the privilege is clear. It was well summarized by James Wilson, an influential member of the Committee of Detail which was responsible for the provision in the Federal Constitution. "In order to enable and encourage a representative of the public to discharge his public trust with firmness and success, it is indispensably necessary, that he should enjoy the fullest liberty of speech, and that he should be protected from the resentment of every one, however powerful, to whom the exercise of that liberty may occasion offence." Id. at 373.
The court continued in summary “Legislators are immune from deterrents to the uninhibited discharge of their legislative duty, not for their private indulgence but for the public good. One must not expect uncommon courage even in legislators. The privilege would be of little value if they could be subjected to the cost and inconvenience and distractions of a trial… [Emphasis added] Id. at 377.

This idea has been affirmed time and again in many states.

In Wisconsin the Speaker of the House’s office received a subpoena for one of the speaker’s administrative assistants related to an audit of a lobbyist’s tax return. The Speaker took the position that his administrative assistant was his alter ego and should be protected by the constitutional provision that a member of the legislature not be “subject to any civil process, during the session of the legislature….” The Supreme Court of Wisconsin agreed with the Speaker.
“…the meaning of a constitutional provision may be determined by looking at the objectives of the framers in adopting the provision. We conclude, as did the court of appeals, that the rationale for the privilege was to preserve the public’s right to representation in the state legislature. When a legislator cannot appear the people whom the legislator represents lose their voice in debate and vote.” [Emphasis added] State v. Beno, 341 N.W. 2d 668 (1984).
In Michigan there was a legislator who had a garnishment on his wages. The judgement was in place before the legislative session started. The Attorney General for the state of Michigan defended the legislator because the garnishment was viewed more as an attack against the legislative branch of government as opposed to an attack on the legislator. The Michigan Constitution uses the same “any civil process” language used in Idaho and Washington. Here is what the Michigan Supreme Court said of the garnishment:
“This is too narrow view of the situation. The idea back of the constitutional provision was to protect the legislators from the trouble, worry, and inconvenience of court proceedings during the session, and for a certain time before and after, so that the state could have their undivided time and attention in public affairs.” Fuller v. Barton, 208 N.W. 696 (1926).
In Arizona and Wisconsin the Attorneys General agreed that a garnishment shall not be allowed on a legislator’s paycheck during the legislative session in their respective states. The Arizona Attorney General cited the Fuller v. Barton case as his authority. “It is my opinion that the Arizona constitutional provision prohibits garnishment proceedings, and, therefore, you should not honor any garnishments involving any legislator during the sessions of the Legislature.” Arizona, Opinion of Attorney General, No. 56-24.

In Kansas the point is made again that the immunity provision of their constitution is for the benefit of the state and of the people that the legislator represents.
The use of the words “subject to” means that the member is not “liable to” the service of civil process. To construe our constitution differently would be to defeat its apparent object. The state is clearly entitled to the service of its members of the legislature during the time sessions of either branch thereof are being held. Our constitution has wisely provided that the members shall not be annoyed with arrests or suits, or be obliged to be absent from their duties….” Cook v. Senior, 45 P. 126, 127-8 (1896).
In California the language in that state constitution reads “A member of the Legislature is not subject to civil process during a session of the Legislature or for 5 days before and after a session.” The California Court of Appeals said:
In precise terms article IV, section 14, creates an exception from civil process without qualification as to the kind of subject matter of the lawsuit. Similar exemptions have been construed to cover civil actions of all kinds, including those involving the legislator’s personal affairs. …such immunities are designed to benefit the public by protecting legislators against compelled distraction and interference during the session.” Harmer v. Superior Court, 79 Cal. Reporter 855 (1969).
And finally in my state, Washington, a member of the Washington Senate, was sued for legal malpractice because he filed a lawsuit after the statute of limitations had expired. Senator Gordon Walgren, in his capacity as an attorney, argued successfully that the statute of limitations tolls (is postponed) while he was tied up with the business of the legislature.
These similar constitutional provisions convince us that immunity was granted by our constitution to protect the legislators from distraction during the stated periods of time and should be broadly construed. Immunity from service of “any civil process” should be granted during the constitutional described time periods… When a person is prevented from exercising his legal remedy by some positive rule of law, the time during which he is prevented from bringing suit is not to be counted against him in determining whether the statute of limitations has barred his right… Seamans v. Walgren, 82 Wn.2d 771, 774 (1973).
This is exactly the case with Representative Phil Hart. The deadline to appeal given by the IRS or the Idaho Tax Commission should toll (be postponed) during the legislative session. Otherwise, Rep. Hart would have likely missed votes and debate to address his tax litigation. However, it is important to also note that this constitutional provision cannot be waived. For example:

In Alaska, that Attorney General says the legislator has no flexibility. According to him, exercising the immunity from civil process is mandatory. “Immunity against civil process cannot be waived by the legislator since the Alaska immunity is intended to protect the public as well as serve the convenience of the legislators.” Alaska, Attorney General Opinion, 159 Op. Att’y Gen. No. 8.

Conclusion

Rep. Hart has relied on the legislative immunity provision of the Idaho Constitution to postpone working on his own tax issues, which have been ongoing for a few years. There is no question that it is within the sovereign power of the states to afford this protection. Furthermore, the law seems to be clearly on Rep. Hart’s side. So why does the witch hunt continue? Has the I.R.S. ever been used as a weapon for political retribution? Both President Richard Nixon(1) and President Bill Clinton were accused of this.(2)

For a man who wrote a book challenging the I.R.S. definition of “income,”(3) to face an arbitrary I.R.S. denial of normal business deductions(4) and then not be allowed to appeal that decision because the I.R.S. ignores the Idaho Constitution while he is in legislative session…is a glimpse into the future of an Obama nation. Remember Obama’s request for 16,000 additional I.R.S. agents?

Not only are Rep. Hart’s accusers in error, but the entire situation substantiates the very reason legislative immunity was written into the constitution in the first place…to prevent political persecution.

Matt Shea is an Army combat veteran, practicing attorney, and State Representative for the 4th Legislative District in Spokane Valley, Washington.
  1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nixon's_Enemies_List
  2. http://archive.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2002/4/22/200136.shtml
  3. http://www.constitutionalincome.com
  4. It has been reported in the press that the IRS’s denial of 100% of Rep. Hart’s business deductions over an eight year period was political payback after Rep. Hart’s refusal to turn over the names and addresses of those who purchased his book. Now both the IRS and the Idaho Tax Commission are attempting to impose the income tax on the amount of these denied deductions which totals approximately $300,000.

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Meltup

Meltup may be the most important economic documentary ever produced. The Second American Revolution has begun! Please share this documentary with all of your friends and family members immediately!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eb1n1X0Oqdw

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Nullify Now!


Did you know that states don’t have to obey unconstitutional federal legislation forced upon them?

Virginia, Utah, Idaho, and other states are fighting the federal healthcare law. Arizona is protecting its borders. Washington State, Oklahoma, and Tennessee are fighting cap-and-trade legislation. Eight states are standing up for gun rights. Twenty-five states have effectively blocked the 2005 Real ID Act…

How? Through nullification.

When a state ‘nullifies’ a federal law, it is proclaiming that the law in question is void and inoperative, or ‘non-effective,’ within the boundaries of that state; or, in other words, not a law as far as that state is concerned.

Nullify Now! is a multi-city event tour focused on education and activism on a state level to say NO to unconstitutional federal “laws” – which, in reality, are not laws at all.


World-class speakers like Thomas E. Woods will be on hand to explain just what nullification is, and how it works – both in history and right now.

Woods, who is the NY Times Best-selling author of Meltdown and The Politically-Incorrect Guide to American History, has his latest book on sale now. In Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21 Century, he explains:
  • How we can roll back Obamacare, cap and trade, and other unconstitutional expansions of federal power through nullification
  • Why the Founding Fathers believed that nullification was the “moderate middle ground,” not the road to secession
  • Why the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution gives the states the power to nullify unconstitutional laws
  • Why states – not the Supreme Court – should arbitrate disputes between the states and the federal government over the constitutionality of the federal government’s actions.

Other speakers in various locations include Jack Hunter of the American Conservative Magazine, and Jim Babka, president of DownsizeDC.

As Thomas Jefferson said, there is a “rightful remedy” to the federal government’s uncontrollable quest for power – it’s called Nullification!

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Independence from Modern Tyranny


“All men are created equal... endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights.”

Americans have a great heritage of rebellion to tyranny. It's ingrained in our culture. Every year on Independence Day we remind our children of the sacrifices that were made for our liberty.

Our Founding Fathers rebelled against an out-of-control government after a long train of abuses and usurpations – a government not unlike our modern central government.

Today, executive power abuses have become standard operating procedure. Warrantless wiretapping, suspension of habeas corpus, “enhanced interrogation” (if it's not torture, why don't our police departments do it?), the list goes on and on. One administration does it to foreigners, the next does it to Americans - even claiming the authority to assassinate U.S. citizens.

This may be shocking to those who don't follow politics closely, but every day Washington D.C. acts more and more like the barbaric government we declared our independence from 234 years ago.

The Democrats' solution to federal abuses of power was a “change” in politicians. Nothing changed except the rate of government growth. The federal government continues taking over huge segments of the economy, usurping more and more powers that were originally reserved for the states, massively expanding health and welfare programs when we can't even meet previous obligations, enriching special interest cronies with taxpayer money, indebting future generations to incomprehensible levels, failing to protect our borders, and on and on and on!

Many Republicans not only want to change politicians, but they also want to provide new guards for our future security. The 2010 Idaho Republican Party State Convention last weekend was filled with ideas for restoring the timeless principles behind the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution. Unlike Idaho Democrats who shut the press out of their platform discussions just weeks ago, the GOP Convention was transparent and open to the public.

I was one of the Delegates to that Convention and would like to highlight some of the ideas that were presented. Of course, some will work out and some will never work their way through the extensive legislative process. I will divide the ideas into two categories - free market economics and government accountability - and explain some of the background reasoning.

ECONOMICS

The election of Miracle Man Obama - not only can he feed the six billion, but he can also provide them with housing, transportation, communications, defense, medical care, and retirement - proves that government schools have not accurately taught economics for generations.

Parents, even if you supplement your child's education with public or private schooling, it doesn't remove your primary responsibility. Please make sure they learn great American principles such as free market economics.

Let's define some basic economic terms and discuss how they relate to our circumstances. To learn more, I recommend the Ludwig von Mises Institute (http://mises.org), a research and educational center that offers many thousands of free resources on economics and liberty.
  • Inflation is an increase in the money supply. There is an average of a two year time delay between monetary inflation and the resulting price increases. So when will we likely see the results of the “bailouts” of late 2008 and the “stimulus” of early 2009?
  • Deflation is a decrease in the money supply or when its rate of growth declines in relation to the increase in the production of other goods. It results in price decreases and was experienced for over 125 years of America's history (until creation of the Fed in 1913). Deflation means your money buys more and more instead of less and less.
  • Velocity is the number of times per year the average dollar is exchanged in transactions. The great scare of 2008 caused a decrease in economic activity - lower velocity - which produced deflationary results in 2009. As the initial scare fades into the past, economic activity will increase and velocity will produce inflationary results.
  • Hyperinflation is an extremely rapid increase in the money supply. There are many examples of the devastating results of hyperinflation in just the last century. Savings are wiped out virtually overnight. The ensuing economic chaos has resulted in riots and sets the stage for a police state. Having a sound money system in place would be our golden parachute.
Republicans passed another resolution and updated the platform to stress the importance of honest money as the foundation of a prosperous market economy. What's the biggest reason to restore sound money?
  1. Big Government: The feds currently print unlimited dollars for “bailouts” and “stimulus” and to pay for the welfare/warfare state, reward their cronies, and buy the cooperation of state and local governments. Because they can't print unlimited amounts of gold and silver, lovers of Big Government despise sound money. Restore honest money and stop Big Government.
  2. Transfer of Wealth: To illustrate how this works, let's say there was a total of $1 trillion in existence 10 years ago and you had worked, scraped, and saved $100 thousand for retirement. Everyone knows that the cost of groceries doubled in the last decade. Your $100 thousand now only buys $50 thousand worth of groceries. How did your other $50 thousand in earnings vanish into thin air? They doubled the money supply to $2 trillion (see point #1) which cut the purchasing value of your savings in half.
Republicans also called for reducing the tax burden to spur job growth, replacing Idaho's income tax with a fair tax, repealing the counterproductive Contractor Registration Act, and no fee increases without decreases in taxes.

ACCOUNTABILITY

Today we're told that the federal government alone gets to define its power. What a frightfully dangerous scenario that would be. If only one side in a contract gets to interpret the terms and can change them on a whim, it is no contract at all.

I think our Founders would be heartbroken, but I don't think they'd be surprised. They were well acquainted with the tendency toward tyranny when power is unchecked. They did their best to cripple their new government to prevent the centralization of power.

Unfortunately for America, partisan extremists from the left and the right are guilty of excusing violations of the Constitution when it's “their guy” in power, and then condemning the “other guys” until they reacquire power. What can we do to curtail abuses no matter who's in power?

Government accountability was a hot topic at the Idaho GOP Convention: from calling for the state checkbook to be posted online to holding Republican politicians accountable by getting their pledge of support for the party platform accompanied by a statement declaring any disagreements they have with it.

Many of the resolutions and platform changes focused on state's rights, restoring the proper balance of power and reigning in the federal government:
  • We believe Idaho should strongly assert its sovereignty under the 10th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”
  • We not only affirm our commitment to the tradition of state nullification of unconstitutional federal laws, but we also specifically call for the Idaho legislature to nullify the federal health care bills of 2010.
  • U.S. Senators were originally appointed by the state legislature to represent state's rights in the national legislature, while Congressmen represented the people. Enacted in 1913, the 17th Amendment changed the way Senators are elected and state's rights have been ignored ever since. We call for repeal of the 17th Amendment.
  • Redistricting Idaho should result in a new legislature made up of one senator from each county and representatives from districts based on population.
  • We reject any federal interference in intrastate direct-to-consumer food commerce.
  • All federal and state police actions should be approved by the county sheriff, the chief law enforcement office of the County.
  • Juries have the right to determine both the facts and the law, and are not bound by the judge's interpretation of the law.
  • Voters should be asked to approve debt-financed city projects.
I got to serve on the Resolutions Committee at the Convention. We were presented with 41 resolutions and passed 24 of them. Surprisingly, it took less than three hours to do it. When they were presented to the whole Convention the following day, several of them were shot down, including one that called for the establishment of an Idaho constitutional militia to protect against a disaster or similar occurrence.

With record attendance at this year's Convention, I believe it was a great success and much good will come of it. I thoroughly enjoyed it!

Monday, June 28, 2010

Constitutional Carry

In addition to passing a resolution (see below) that says, “concealed carry permits should not be compulsory for citizens who wish to lawfully carry a concealed firearm within Idaho,” last weekend the 2010 Idaho Republican Party State Convention passed numerous other good resolutions and platform changes, some of which support:
FREEDOM FROM REGISTRATION RESOLUTION

WHEREAS the constitution of Idaho Article I Section 11 states, "no law shall impose licensure, registration or special taxation on ownership or possession of firearms..."

WHEREAS concealed carry permits are a type of licensure and registration

WHEREAS Arizona has passed a law to allow unlicensed concealed carry

BE IT RESOLVED THAT concealed carry permits should not be compulsory for citizens who wish to lawfully carry a concealed firearm within Idaho.

BE IT RESOLVED THAT concealed carry permits should only be issued as requested by Idaho citizens for interstate travel.

BE IT RESOLVED THAT Idaho gun laws should prohibit any type of recorded licensure or registration.

Submitted by Lucas Baumbach

Monday, June 21, 2010

A Very Taxing Process

By Idaho State Rep. Phil Hart

After fighting what I believed was an unconstitutional federal income tax, six years ago I capitulated, filed returns, and have since then, paid $120,054 in combined state and federal income taxes (including the interest and penalties). At the time, I was also working toward a settlement with the IRS. What derailed this settlement process was becoming a target for an audit. My experiences provide a case study of why we need to get rid of the income tax on wages and salaries.

Years ago I became interested in the income tax and wanted to understand how it worked. I had read a lot of the literature on the subject. In doing so, I noticed there was a big gaping hole in the literature. No one had written about the intent of the Income Tax Amendment when it was debated and finally ratified on February 25, 1913. Plus I thought it would be easier to research the purpose and intent of the income tax rather than study the Internal Revenue Code. I focused my research on the years 1908 to 1913, as this was when the income tax amendment was debated. Because I discovered so much new information in doing this research, I wrote a book about it.

The genesis of the modern income tax was the Democrat Party’s Presidential Platform of 1908. The income tax plank read,
“We favor as part of our revenue system, and we urge the submission of a constitutional amendment specifically authorizing Congress to levy and collect a tax upon individual and corporate incomes to the end that wealth might bear its proportionate share of the burdens of the Federal Government.”
At the time there were no entitlement programs, and the greatest beneficiary of government was the wealthy. But with only consumption taxes, the wealthy were not paying for the benefits they received. The income tax did not start out as a “soak the rich” scheme, but only as an attempt to be fair in distributing the burdens of the cost of government. It was not a tax on people, but only a tax on what was called at the time “accumulated wealth.”

In 1909, the author of the Income Tax Amendment, Senator Brown from Nebraska said “It is the theory of the friends of the income tax proposition that property should be taxed and not individuals.” 44 Congressional Record, 1570 (1909).

I litigated the issue with the government, challenging its constitutionality. My challenge to the income tax included petitioning the United States Supreme Court. But the Supreme Court would not hear my case. The late Mr. Paul Chappell, a former attorney with the IRS Office of Chief Counsel for the District of Columbia said of my Petition “Reading Phil Hart’s work is like returning to law school. After decades of practice as a tax attorney, Phil makes me feel as if I’m a student again.” And after reading my Petition for the eighth time, another tax attorney, Mr. Arch McColl wrote me, “What you did was brilliant legal work in your Petition for Certiorari….”

In 2004, after my judicial remedy had been exhausted, I filed 1040 returns to get caught up. Suddenly I found myself in an IRS audit. I had to sue the IRS to avoid turning over the names and addresses of those who purchased my book, Constitutional Income. I was represented by the Center for Individual Rights, a Washington D.C. public interest freedom of speech law firm. As far as CIR can figure out, I was the first author in American history to have the government demand I turn over such names and addresses.

The Center for Individual Rights won these lawsuits for me. There were actually two lawsuits, and each lawsuit took a year. However, four years later when the IRS issued their final audit report, the IRS denied all my business deductions for eight years. The amount of denied deductions totaled $300,000. Why? An IRS employee told me “When you don’t give us everything we ask for, you get all of your deductions denied.” For them, this isn’t about the liens or the money; it is about getting the names.

I believe I have a First Amendment right to protect the identities of my readers, just as a journalist has a First Amendment right to protect their sources. I also believe in protecting my readers’ Forth Amendment right against unreasonable searches and seizures. These are principles worth defending!

During this four year audit, I provided the IRS with all my canceled checks, receipts, invoices and so on. Boxes worth. Yet all these deductions were denied solely for political reasons. Losing $300,000 worth of deductions inflated my now purported “taxable income” and the tax imposed thereon. My expenses for engineering and drafting personnel were denied, office rent expenses denied, office supply expenses denied, book publishing expenses including editors, artists and printing expenses denied. All of my business deductions were denied, all of them. What small business can operate with $0 in business expenses over an eight year period?

Protecting my readers from having big government snooping into their lives has increased my state and federal tax liability by about $125,000.

When the Idaho State Tax Commission got their hands on this IRS audit report that reflected the $300,000 in denied business deductions, they wanted their cut of the inflated “taxable income” too. This is the main issue currently being contested in my litigation with them.

After the Supreme Court declined to hear my case, I began making tax payments. But of the $120,054 I have paid since then, not a single dollar of these payments has been used to offset any of the lien amounts. It’s a nightmare. I would happily trade places with any of my detractors who somehow think I’ve gotten a “good deal.”

Regardless of whether or not the income tax on wages and salaries is constitutional, most agree on one thing: it is an inefficient and privacy invading tax. On the private side, it takes 22 cents for its bookkeeping, reporting, accounting fees, and legal fees for every $1 collected. Whereas a consumption tax takes only one cent for compliance on the private side for every $1 collected.

The income tax places a huge tax on wages and salaries. We all know you get less of what you tax. And guess what? We now have fewer jobs. The income tax on wages and salaries is a job killer. And such a complicated system provides many opportunities for abuse on both the private side and the government side.

These circumstances of mine have created a lot of controversy. But how can it be wrong for me to fight for my legitimate deductions and to stand on my principals?

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Ceding more of Idaho to the Feds

WASHINGTON — Championed by Rep. Simpson, and now Senators Crapo and Risch, the Central Idaho Economic Development and Recreation Act — CIEDRA — has been hailed as a compromise. But both supporters and opponents of the measure acknowledged during a hearing by the public lands and forests subcommittee of the Senate Energy and Commerce Committee that the bill is far from perfect.

Idaho lawmakers asked the Democrat Congress on Wednesday for continued negotiation and collaboration on the sweeping legislation that would designate more than 300,000 acres of land in the Boulder-White Clouds mountain ranges as wilderness.

But advocates for recreation enthusiasts argued that the legislation was unnecessary, with much of the land already under federal control, and would hamper motorized recreation in the land.

Bill Dart, a representative of the Idaho Recreation Council, said he doesn't think the measure is necessary, as much of the area that would be designated as wilderness is already covered by the National Recreation Act, which prevents mining and logging.

During his testimony, Simpson reiterated his commitment to work with the various interests that have stakes in the outcome of the bill. Despite criticism from motorized recreation enthusiasts who say the measure would limit their use of land and environmentalists that claim the bill doesn't go far enough, Simpson said his bill protects Idaho's land [from] its people.

"The people live and recreate in this area are just important as the lines we draw on a map," Simpson said.

The hearing came only a day after Gov. Butch Otter voiced his opposition to the bill in a letter to Senators Risch and Crapo.

"My opposition to CIEDRA and additional wilderness areas in Idaho should not surprise anyone. I recognize the need for economic development in Custer County, Clayton, and the surrounding communities, but remain unconvinced that the answer is more wilderness acres and federal red-tape," the letter said.

Otter's Democratic opponent, Keith Allred, quickly released a statement proclaiming his support for the bill and condemning Otter for offering only last-minute suggestions for change.

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/06/16/96020/idaho-wilderness-bill-needs-more.html