USA 2024 Elections Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Thu Dec 29 23:32:10 PST 2022


Juan worships Biden because Biden is a Lying SocCom
Leftist and a Raging Abusive Asshole like himself.


GOP-Controlled State Legislatures Weigh 'Constitutionality' Of
Presidential Executive Orders

https://www.theepochtimes.com/gop-controlled-state-legislatures-weigh-constitutionality-of-presidential-executive-orders_4948357.html

Rep. Brian Seitz (R-Branson) will enter his third session when the
Missouri General Assembly convenes in Springfield on Jan. 4 and, for
the third time, he is sponsoring a bill that would require state
lawmakers to scrutinize and, potentially disregard, some presidential
executive orders.
President Joe Biden signs executive orders as Vice President Kamala
Harris and Director of NIAID Anthony Fauci look on in the White House
in Washington on Jan. 21, 2021. (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

Under his proposed House Bill 174, the Missouri House must review all
presidential executive orders not affirmed by a Congressional vote to
determine if “they are, in fact, Constitutional,” Seitz told The Epoch
Times.

If the Missouri House has questions about the constitutionality of a
presidential executive order, the bill requires it be referred to the
state’s attorney general to determine if it “restricts a person’s
constitutional rights.”

“I’m a firm believer in states’ rights, and am very concerned about
losing our authority [as a legislature] to federal overreach,” Seitz
said.

That purview would apply to any presidential executive order that
relates to “regulation of business activities or personal behaviors
during a pandemic or other public health emergency,” natural
resources, the agricultural industry, land use, “the financial sector
through the imposition of environmental, social, or governance [ESG]
standards, and “the constitutional right to keep and bear arms.”

“There are three branches of the government—not one,” Seitz said,
stressing if adopted, the measure “would cover executive orders from
presidents of either party.”

But make no mistake: The bill—along with Senate companions filed by
Sen. Rick Brattin (R-Harrisonville)—is hardly bipartisan in genesis.

Since Democrat Joe Biden was sworn in as president in January 2021,
similar bills have been introduced in at least nine other
Republican-controlled state legislatures: Alabama, Utah, Nebraska,
South Dakota, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Iowa, and South
Carolina.

The Oklahoma and Tennessee bills advanced through committees to
chamber votes in 2021 but ultimately were not adopted.

American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) senior director for
Homeland Security, International Relations, and Federalism Karla Jones
said the bills are in response to “federal overreach that infringes on
state sovereignty.”

Washington-based ALEC is usually the generator of conservative policy
guides and model bills that state lawmakers carry into sessions.

But in reference to presidential executive orders, the council adopted
its model policy regarding presidential executive orders in December
2021 in response to bills submitted by state lawmakers in six states
during that year’s sessions.

“We just saw [the bills] proliferating because executive orders were
becoming such a problem,” Jones told The Epoch Times. “There was a lot
of alarm among state lawmakers who care about federalism and worry
about federal overreach.”

During his first six months in office, “Biden was on track to issue
more executive orders than FDR [Franklin Delano Roosevelt],” she said.
“He has since leveled off considerably and is now pretty equal with
President Donald Trump, who also issued more executive orders than we
thought was prudent.”

According to Ballotpedia, as of Dec. 22, Biden had signed 105
executive orders. During his four years in office, Trump issued 220.
FDR signed more than 3,500 in his 12 years in office.

Jones said it is easy to disparage a president’s use of executive
authority, but it’s often exerted by default.

“Congress doesn’t have the political will to do the hard work, so many
presidents rely on executive orders,” she said. “George Washington
had, like, one. Single-digit executive orders,” during a presidency
“was typical for the first 50 years of our history.”

ALEC’s policy fine-tunes the 2021 versions of the bills. Rather than
tie them to specific issues, such as gun owners’ rights, the policy is
a guide for bills “that could be used in any state” across a range of
issues, Jones said, including by Democrat-controlled legislatures.

“Blue state may care about federal overreach in other areas.”

Seitz’s proposed HB 174 is similar to Iowa’s HF 815, filed in 2021 by
Rep. John Wills, (R-Spirit Lake), which would have required Iowa to
disregard, or not enforce, any presidential executive order related to
a public health emergency, firearms, land-use, or regulation of
natural resources, the agricultural industry, and the financial
sector, that “restricts a person’s rights.”

HF 815 would also have accorded the Iowa Legislative Council authority
to review the constitutionality of presidential executive orders and
refer its conclusions to the state’s attorney general or governor’s
office.

Oklahoma Rep. Jay Steagall (R-Yukon), sponsored a 2021 resolution that
claimed the U.S. Constitution’s 10th Amendment allows states to claim
sovereignty when it comes to discarding presidential executive orders.

Neither was adopted.

Read more here...


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