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SC 1 of 44 states Filing Protest Resolutions
February 19, 2010

The South Carolina House Republican Caucus has twice pushed through resolutions protesting the unprecedented federal power grab.

The Associated Press has a story this morning that details the states' protests -- from both the right and the left. The article also quotes SC House Majority Leader Kenny Bingham.

 

Some excerpts:

COLUMBIA -- With tax collections tanking and jobless rates at record highs, state legislators hundreds of miles from Washington have found an easy way to appeal to conservative voters: Bash the federal government.

Lawmakers in 44 states have introduced measures warning Congress not to trample states' rights and dozens of other resolutions opposing the government on issues including gun control and health care.
 
...
 
In conservative South Carolina, Republican House Majority Leader Kenny Bingham said his caucus made standing up to the federal government a top priority this year.

"I hear it at church, at the barbershop: 'You guys need to stand up.' The issue of federal intrusion is a John Doe issue," he said. "This is a yes-point for us. They're mad. They're upset. They expect us to respond."

That response included passing a resolution to assert the state's rights under several constitutional amendments. It says South Carolina's attorney general will sue if Congress passes mandates the state deems unconstitutional, and that no state agency will follow them while a decision is pending.

"To say public reaction and being vocal doesn't have any influence is ludicrous," Bingham said. "That's how you enact change in a civilized society."

Eight states -- Alabama, Alaska, Idaho, Louisiana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Tennessee -- have passed resolutions asserting states' rights under the 10th Amendment, according to Boldin's group. Another passed the Kansas Senate last week after hundreds of residents rallied, brandishing copies of the U.S. Constitution, and vowed to "take their country back."

In South Carolina, the House has already passed an expanded version of a states' rights measure it first approved last year. A version is awaiting Senate approval. "It is vitally important for the future of our nation that the states stand against the relentless expansion of the federal government and restore the proper balance to our federal system," it reads. ...

The backlash isn't limited to conservative legislation or the nascent "tea party" movement, which calls for reduced government: Proposals in Vermont and New Hampshire, for example, urge President Barack Obama to bring the states' National Guard troops home from Iraq, arguing congressional authorization for their federal deployment has expired.

Some legislators are becoming increasingly defiant, with more states considering bills that seek to nullify federal law, rather than simply sending a message.

In Virginia, legislators have passed the so-called Health Care Freedom Act, an effort to annul mandates proposed in congressional health care legislation, which has stalled since Massachusetts voters sent Republican Scott Brown to the Senate to replace the late Ted Kennedy.

More than 30 other states have introduced similar legislation modeled after the American Legislative Exchange Council's "Freedom of Choice in Health Care Act" since the limited-government group endorsed it in late 2008.


 

 
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